Cronus Airlines Explained

Airline:Cronus Airlines
Fleet Size:7
Destinations:14
Iata:X5
Icao:CUS[1]
Callsign:Cronus
Founded:1994
Ceased:2001 (merged into Aegean Airlines)
Headquarters:Athens, Greece
Key People:Ioannis Manetas, Panos and Thanasis Laskaridis
Hubs:Athens International Airport
Focus Cities:Athens, Thessaloniki, Heraklion
Frequent Flyer:Cronus Club

Cronus Airlines was a Greek airline based in Athens. It operatedscheduled as well as chartered flights using a fleet of Boeing 737-300 & 400 aircraft.

History

Cronus Airlines was established in 1994 by Ret. Air Force fighter pilot Captain Theodore Kokmotos, started operation in 1995 with a single aircraft that flew flights targeting expattraffic between Greece and Germany as well as chartered flights to popular touristdestinations. Two years later, Cronus leased more aircraft and expanded its network,gradually becoming the largest privately owned airline in Greece. In late December 1998,the Laskaridis family who own a large fleet of refrigerator ships, acquireda controlling 55% stake in Cronus. In spring 2001, a code-share agreement was signed withAegean Airlines and a few months later Cronus' aircraft were painted in Aegean's liverycarrying an AEGEANCronus logo. Eventually, Cronus was fully acquired by Aegean in October2001 and its owners obtained a minority share in Aegean.

Destinations

Cronus Airlines operated scheduled services from/to the following cities:

International destinations:

In general terms, flights to London, Paris and Rome were operated from Athens, while those to Germany were mostly continuations of the domestic flights to Salonica, therefore passengers from Athens to German destinations would fly to Salonica and then remain on the same plane for the leg to Germany. There were also flights between Stuttgart and Kavala.

See also

References

  1. Web site: Operators by state. icao.int. 16 April 2015. 4 October 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151004161332/http://www.icao.int/safety/ism/Accident%20Incident%20Reporting%20Guidance/R4CDOperatorsbystate.pdf. dead.

External links