Photos: As credited
Text: Pierre Kosmidis
By May 21st, 1941 the Germans had concluded the invasion of mainland Greece, codenamed “Operation Marita” and were in the process of attacking the island of Crete, with an airborne assault that was initiated the day before, on May 20th, codenamed “Operation Merkur”.
This was a decision that would cost the Germans dearly.
A previous convoy on May 18, 1941, including those two ships and the Italian transport ship Laura C. transferred via the same route, from Patras to Taranto, the heavy guns and tanks of the 2nd Panzer Division and then returned to Patras to load the remaining tanks, as well as other vehicles and personnel from the Division.
The chronicle of the disaster
On May 21st, 1941, at 9:00 in the morning, Kybfels and Marburg were being loaded with vehicles and artillery of the 2nd Armoured Division, with the port of Taranto as their destination.From Italy, they would be carried by rail to the Eastern Front, for Operation “Barbarossa”.
Kybfels had struck a mine!
Shortly afterwards Marburg hit a mine too and started to sink!
The minefield was set just the day before by the British mine layer HMS Abdiel, between Kefalonia and Ithaki islands. The exact location of this minefield, in a busy route the Axis shipping used frequently cannot be attributed just to luck. It appears that the British had a very well organised intelligence service in Patras that monitored all the moves of the Axis shipping.
HMS Abdiel went down in history as the first mining operation in very deep waters, which surprised the Axis powers in the Mediterranean.
The research
George Karelas, from Patras, Greece, is a researcher and scuba diver, with a keen interest in WW2 Wrecks.Mr. Karelas says to WW2 Wrecks and pierrekosmidis.blogspot.com:
“I was examining a photo from the Italian State Archives (Archivio Centrale Dello Stato) of a burning ship near the Greek coast.
The caption read as follows:
“Flaming ship near the Greek coast, April-May 1941”.
This photo was shot by an Italian reconnaissance aircraft with the Regia Aeronautica emblem clearly visible on the wing.
Although the silhouette of the ship was quite distinct, identification seemed impossible, because so many ships were bombed during the German invasion of Greece, out of which several sank, while few others escaped.
What I did not consider, though, was the possibility that the ship belonged to the Axis powers and was not Allied.
When I read the details of the sinking of Marburg and Kybfels, between the islands of Kefalonia and Lefkada, I immediately noticed that Marburg had four masts.
I started searching the region and finally the northern coast of Ithaki island coincided exactly with that of the photo!
Even the lighthouse that still exists today was there!
But did Marburg sink so close to the shore?
That was great news!
The discovery
Gerasimos Sotiropoulos, the owner of the Aquatic World Diving Center in Kefalonia, is a tireless researcher of the seabed and the history of the area.According to the testimony of a German soldier who was aboard the Marburg, the ship was abandoned immediately after the explosion of the mine on the orders of the captain.
The ship was burning fiercely for hours and, in the evening, the burning ship was visible from Lefkada Island. The photo of the burning ship may have been shot in the afternoon of the 21st, or on the day after. Reports from the German Naval Command did not offer any additional details on the exact point where the ship sank.
The rescue of the shipwrecked soldiers was made by Italian ships as the Ionian Islands were under Italian occupation at that time and by Greek fishermen. The Marburg appears to have been abandoned to her fate.
The investigation by Gerasimos Sotiropoulos focused on eyewitness accounts from people who might have known the exact location where the burning ship sank. The stories of old men led to a target west of Ithaki island. The ship appeared to have drifted south from where it struck the mine. After long searches of the seabed with sonar equipment, the ship was found at last!
Despite the fact that this depth does not allow for scuba divers to examine the wreck and her valuable cargo of tanks and other military equipment of the 2nd Panzer Division, it is still possible that ROVs will be able to visit this unique shipwreck and bring back to the surface unique images of the tanks lost at sea.
Until then, Poseidon, the Greek god of the Seas, will keep his secrets well hidden in the seafloor!
SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
Platon Alexiades – Target Corinth Canal
Byron Tesapsides – DIE KRIEGSMARINE IN DER ÄGÄIS
Very Special Ships: Abdiel Class Fast Minelayers of World War Two, by Arthur Nicholson
Βill Russ microfilms archives
By Pierre Kosmidis
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου