Known as Italian Line and from 1992 Italia Line, whose official name was Italia di Navigazione S.p.A., was a passenger shipping line that operated regular transatlantic services between Italy and the United States, and Italy and South America. During the late 1960s the company turned to running cruises, and from 1981 it became a global freight operator.

History

House flag used by Italian Line

The company was founded in 1932 through a merger of the Genoa-based Navigazione Generale Italiana (NGI), the Turin-based Lloyd Sabaudo, and the Trieste-based Cosulich STN lines, encouraged by the Italian government. The new company acquired the Cosulich-owned ships Saturnia and Vulcania, the Lloyd Sabaudo-owned Conte Rosso, Conte Biancamano and Conte Grande and the NGI-owned Giulio Cesare, Duilio, Roma and Augustus. The same year two previously ordered ocean liners were delivered to the company: Rex, that won the Blue Riband in 1933, and Conte di Savoia.

Giulio Cesare, built in 1923, in Italian Line service 1932–1937

In World War II the company lost many ships, including Rex and Conte di Savoia. Others were captured by the United States and converted into troopships; four of them survived the war: Conte Biancamano, Conte Grande, Saturnia, and Vulcania.

Commercial service was resumed in 1947 under the company's new name Società di navigazione Italia. In addition to the four vessels returned to the company by the United States, two new vessels, Andrea Doria and Cristoforo Colombo were commissioned in 1953 and 1954. In 1956, Andrea Doria, the company's three-year-old flagship collided with the Swedish ship Stockholm near Nantucket and sank, with passenger deaths estimated at 46 or 55. The company replaced Andrea Doria with Leonardo da Vinci, which went into service in 1960. This ship was based on the same design as Andrea Doria, but was larger, and featured technical innovations.

SS Andrea Doria

In the late 1950s aircraft passenger travel had yet to have a noticeable effect on ocean-going passenger numbers between the United States and the Mediterranean. The Italian Line, therefore, ordered two new ships: Michelangelo and Raffaello. Building the ships took longer than expected, and they were not delivered until 1965. Being late into service, they were unable to compete profitably on the North Atlantic route. Although planned for cruising as an alternative, the ships had several design flaws that made their use as cruise ships problematic.

Despite huge financial loss, the Italian Line operated the transatlantic route until 1976, after which the Leonardo da Vinci was withdrawn from service; the Michelangelo and Raffaello had been sold the previous year. The Cristoforo Colombo was also withdrawn from service at this time.

I.C.I. - Italia Crociere Internazionali

The Leonardo da Vinci became a cruise ship in 1977–78, after which it was withdrawn due to high fuel costs. In 1979 and 1980 the company operated two ex-Lloyd Triestino liners, Galileo Galilei and Guglielmo Marconi, as cruise ships, but this again proved unprofitable. The ship Ausonia was also charted for brief service under this line.

SS Raffaello & SS Michelangelo

Because of the unprofitability of the cruise business, the Italian Line turned to freight shipping. It operated its principal container services between the Mediterranean, the west coast of North America, and Central and South America, carrying about 180,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) of freight in 2001.

Previously owned by the Italian government, the company was privatized in 1998 when sold to d'Amico Società di Navigazione. In August 2002, it was acquired by CP Ships, and in 2005 the Italian Line name ceased to exist following CP's one-brand strategy. CP Ships itself was bought-out in late 2005 by TUI AG, and merged with Hapag-Lloyd in mid-2006.

Ships

Passenger ships

ImageBuiltNameTonnageShipyardOperatedNotes
1908SS Tel Aviv08,312 GRT8,312 GRTRussell & Co., Scotland1932–1934Former Cosulich Line ship; scrapped 1934
1917SS Colombo12,003 GRTPalmer S&E Co Ltd, Jarrow on Tyne1932–1941Refurbished in passenger vessel by Cantieri Baia Napoli. Scuttled at Massaua, 3 April 1941
1922SS Giulio Cesare21,848 GRTSwan Hunter & Wigham Richardson, Ltd, UK1932–1937transferred to Lloyd Triestino
1923SS Conte Verde18,765 GRTWilliam Beardmore & Co., Scotland1932–1940
1923SS Duilio24,281 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1932–1937transferred to Lloyd Triestino, scrapped 1948
1925SS Conte Biancamano24,416 GRTWilliam Beardmore & Co., Scotland1932–1940 1947–1960
1926SS Roma32,583 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1932–1939
1926MS Vulcania23,970 GRTCantiere Navale Triestino, Italy1932–1940 1947–1965sold to Siosa Lines
1927MS Saturnia23,940 GRTCantiere Navale Triestino, Italy1932–1940 1946–1965scrapped 1965
1927SS Conte Grande25,661 GRTStabilimento Tecnico Triestino, Italy1932–1940 1947–1961scrapped in 1961
1927SS Conte Rosso18,017 GRTWilliam Beardmore & Co., Scotland1932–1940torpedoed and sunk by HMS Upholder, 24 May 1941
1928MS Augustus32,650 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1932–1939largest diesel-engined liner of her time
1932SS Conte di Savoia48,502 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Italy1932–1940scuttled in Venice by retreating German forces, 11 September 1943. Raised 1945 and scrapped.
1932SS Rex51,062 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1932–1940bombed and sunk off Trieste by RAF and SAAF bombers, 8 September 1944
1932MS Neptunia19,475 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Italy1937–1940torpedoed and sunk by HMS Upholder, 18 September 1941
1932MV Oceania19,507 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Italy1937–1940torpedoed and sunk by HMS Upholder, 18 September 1941
1951MS Giulio Cesare27,078 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Italy1951–1973scrapped 1973
1951MS Augustus27,090 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Italy1952–1976scrapped 2012
1951SS Andrea Doria29,083 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1953–1956capsized and sank on 25 July 1956 after colliding with MS Stockholm
1953SS Cristoforo Colombo29,191 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1954–1977scrapped 1982 in Kaohsiung, Taiwan
1960SS Leonardo da Vinci33,340 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1960–1980burned and capsized 4 July 1980, raised and scrapped 1982
1951MS Rossini13,225 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico - San Marco Trieste, Italy1963scrapped 1977
1951MS Donizetti13,226 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico - San Marco Trieste, Italy1963scrapped 1977
1951MS Verdi13,226 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico - San Marco Trieste, Italy1963scrapped 1977
1965SS Michelangelo45,911 GRTAnsaldo Shipyards, Italy1965–1975scrapped 1991
1965SS Raffaello45,933 GRTCantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Trieste, Italy1965–1975sunk 1983

Container ships

BuiltNameTonnageCapacityShipyardIMO numberCall signFlagStatus/Comments
1985Aquitania17702 GT1077 TEUStocznia Szczecinska S.A., Poland8300975HPUEPanama1991 chartered, 1993 purchased from Cyprus
1989Cristoforo Colombo32630 GT3632 TEUFincantieri-Cantieri Navali Italiani S.p.A., Italy8618449ICYSItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1989Amerigo Vespucci32630 GT3632 TEUFincantieri-Cantieri Navali Italiani S.p.A., Italy8618451ICBAItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1991S. Caboto15783 GT1268 TEUFincantieri-Cantieri Navali Italiani S.p.A., Italy8618413ICMSItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1992California17123 GT1410 TEUNaikai Zosen Corp., Japan8901743ICFCItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1994Cielo del Cile15778 GT1512 TEUThyssen Nordseewerke GmbH, Germany9046253ELVB3Liberia2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1997Dollart Trader16165 GT1608 TEUMTW Schiffswerft GmbH, Germany9162356V2OD5Antigua & Barbuda2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1998Cielo di San Francisco25359 GT2474 TEUVolkswerft Stralsund GmbH, Germany9153408DGZOGermany2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
1998Cielo del Canada25361 GT2470 TEUMeeres-Technik-Wismar, Germany9138290V2PE2Antigua & Barbuda2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
2000Cielo del Caribe13066 GT1302 TEUFlensburger Schiffbau-Gesellschaft MbH & Co. KG, Germany9202053ELXN2Liberia2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
2002Cielo d'America25580 GT2462 TEUThyssen Nordseewerke GmbH, Germany9239733ICCVItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia
2002Cielo d'Europa25535 GT2462 TEUThyssen Nordseewerke GmbH, Germany9236664ICCPItaly2002 to d'Amico shipping Italia

Further reading

  • Italia Line: – page offline – please refer to
  • (Container prefix codes, now linking Italia Line units to Hapag-Lloyd due to the merger)
  • CP Ships: Press release – , 6 August 2002
  • CP Ships: Press release – , 28. April 2005
  • Miller, William H (1999). . Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-40489-9.

External links

  • Swiggum, Susan; Kohli, Marjorie (3 February 2005). . TheShipsList. Archived from on 16 January 2013. – fleet list
  • Larsson, Björn (24 June 2019). . Maritime Timetable images. – images of company brochures
  • . The Last Ocean Liners. – trade routes and ships of the Italian Line in the 1950s, 60s and 70s