See also: List of missing ships and List of maritime disasters.
This is a list of shipwrecks located in and around the continent of Europe.
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 May 1918 | An that was torpedoed by and sank under tow off Vlorë, Albania. | 40.3917°N 33°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 June 1940 | A that was sunk by German bombers off Koksijde. | 51.1378°N 2.585°W | |||
23 April 1918 | An scuttled as a blockship in the mouth of Ostend harbour. | ||||
Z8 Bruno Heinemann | 25 January 1942 | A German destroyer sunk by naval mines laid by . | |||
![]() | 19 March 1945 | A cargo ship that stuck a naval mine in the River Scheldt. | 51.4°N 20°W | ||
29 May 1940 | A G-class destroyer that was torpedoed by off Nieuwpoort. | 51.4°N 51°W | |||
![]() | 6 March 1987 | A RORO ferry that capsized four minutes out from Zeebrugge, resulting in 193 deaths. | |||
7 November 1944 | A tank landing ship that struck a naval mine off Ostend. | ||||
18 December 1914 | A Type U 5 U-boat that sank north of Zeebrugge. | 51.3833°N 14°W | |||
9 December 1914 | A German submarine mined in the First Battle of the Atlantic. | 51.1°N 30°W | |||
5 October 1918 | A Type UB I U-boat that was scuttled off Zeebrugge. | 51.35°N 15°W | |||
5 October 1918 | A Type UB III U-boat that was scuttled off Zeebrugge. | 51.3167°N 15°W | |||
27 May 1916 | A German minelaying submarine that struck a naval mine off Zeebrugge. | ||||
14 October 1917 | A German minelaying submarine sunk by a naval mine off Zeebrugge. | ||||
14 July 1918 | A German minelaying submarine sunk by a mine off Flanders. | ||||
3 February 1735 | An East Indiaman that ran aground off Zeebrugge. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 30 June 1921 | A steamship that struck a naval mine off Burgas. | 42.4681°N 68.685°W | ||
![]() | 19 September 1941 | A cargo ship that struck a naval mine off Burgas. | 42.3833°N 75°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
American Star | ![]() | 18 January 1993 | An ocean liner that ran aground on Fuerteventura under tow, then split in half and broke into many pieces. | ||
![]() | 1 January 1972 | A cement barge that ran aground off Arona, Tenerife. | |||
Telamon | ![]() | 31 October 1981 | A cargo ship that was forced aground near Arricife, Lanzarote. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 February 1855 | A that sank in a severe storm in the Strait of Bonifacio. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 November 1944 | An that was sunk by and off Pag, during the Action of 1 November 1944. | ||||
12 August 1914 | An Austrian steam liner sunk by an underwater mine near Rovinj. | ||||
16 November 1918 | An Italian sunk by an underwater mine near Ližnjan. | ||||
18 July 1915 | A armored cruiser that was torpedoed by southeast of Dubrovnik. | ||||
22 December 1943 | A light cruiser that ran aground on Silba and was sunk by British motor torpedo boats. | 44.3667°N 56°W | |||
Peltastis | ![]() | 08 January 1968 | A Greek cargo ship sunk in bad weather at sea. | ||
10 June 1918 | A dreadnought battleship that was sunk off Molat island by Italian torpedo boat MAS-15. | ||||
31 October 1918 | A Type UB III U-boat that was scuttled at Rijeka. | 45.3167°N 40°W | |||
1 November 1918 | A dreadnought battleship that was sunk at anchor at Pula by an Italian human torpedo. | 44.8692°N 13.8192°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
22 February 2014 | A Russian trawler intentionally sunk in 25m (82feet) water off the coast of Limassol. | |||
1947 | A gunboat that sank at Larnaca. | |||
![]() | 23 March 1998 | A cargo ship that ran aground off Paphos in heavy seas, during a voyage from Greece to Syria with a cargo of timber. | ||
Kyrenia ship | Unknown | Unknown | A Greek merchant ship dating to the 4th century BC that now sits on display in a museum at Kyrenia Castle. | |
![]() | 22 February 2014 | A German made pleasure craft intentionally sunk in 18m (59feet) water off the coast of Limassol. | ||
![]() | 7 June 1980 | A Swedish ro-ro ferry that sank 1miles off the port of Larnaca. | ||
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
25 September 1868 | A Russian frigate that ran aground off the coast of Thyborøn. | 56.6833°N 16°W | |||
31 May 1916 | A armored cruiser that sank at the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. | ||||
4 October 1710 | A ship of the line that exploded and sank in the Great Northern War during the action of 4 October 1710. | ||||
24 December 1811 | A 74-gun third-rate ship of the line that stranded off Thorsminde in heavy storm, together with . | 56.3583°N 8.1°W | |||
31 May 1916 | A Minotaur-class armoured cruiser that suffered a magazine explosion during the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. | 56.9672°N 5.8306°W | |||
1 June 1916 | A light cruiser that was scuttled following a collision with in the Battle of Jutland. | ||||
31 May 1916 | A light cruiser that was torpedoed and shelled during the Battle of Jutland. | ||||
Freja af Stockholm | ![]() | 20 February 1994 | A Swedish tugboat that sank outside Frederikshavn. The vessel now rests at a depth of 23m (75feet). | 57.45°N 50°W | |
31 May 2003 | A Chinese bulk carrier that sank after a collision with the Cypriot container vessel Gdynia, without injury or loss of life.[1] | ||||
31 May 1916 | An that suffered a magazine explosion during the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. | ||||
31 May 1916 | An that was sunk in the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. | ||||
Kolding cog | Unknown | Unknown | A wreck discovered in Kolding Fjord, thought to date from around 1190. | ||
1 June 1916 | A that was scuttled off Horns Reef after severe damage in the Battle of Jutland. | 56.25°N 58°W | |||
13 February 1811 | A that ran aground off Skagen, Jutland. | ||||
1 June 1916 | A predreadnought battleship that suffered a magazine explosion during the Battle of Jutland. | ||||
31 May 1916 | A battlecruiser that suffered a magazine explosion during the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. | ||||
24 December 1811 | A 98-gun second-rate ship of the line that stranded off Thorsminde in heavy storm, together with . | 56.3583°N 8.1°W | |||
4 November 1916 | A Type U 19 U-boat that ran aground and was scuttled by her crew on the following day. | 56.55°N 16°W | |||
14 April 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was accidentally sunk by the German torpedo boat T17 off Skagen. | 57.7333°N 49°W | |||
5 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by a British aircraft east of Aarhus. | 56.1667°N 15°W | |||
1 June 1916 | A armored cruiser that foundered under tow after severe damage in the Battle of Jutland. The site is a protected place. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 28 September 1994 | A cruise ferry that sunk in international waters of the Baltic Sea, about 40km (30miles) south-southeast of Utö island, Finland, claiming 852 lives. | |||
Maasilinn Wreck | Unknown | Unknown | A wreck off Saaremaa island dating to the 16th century. | ||
9 January 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by a mine. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lincoln City | ![]() | 1941 | A British trawler that was sunk in Tórshavn Harbour. | ||
![]() | 7 December 1941 | A steamship that sank after a storm in the sound of Fugloyarfjørður. | |||
Tjaldur | ![]() | 27 June 1946 | Sank after hitting the nesse of Mjóvanes. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Föglö wreck | Unknown | Unknown | A 19th-century schooner that was discovered in 2003 off Föglö, along with a well-preserved cargo of champagne. | ||
20 November 1468 | A ship of the Hanseatic League that was wrecked in a storm off Raseborg. | ||||
1790 | A Russian frigate sunk in the Battle of Svensksund. | ||||
9 October 1771 | A Dutch merchant ship that ran aground and sank. |
See main article: List of shipwrecks of France.
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 May 1945 | A German luxury ocean liner that was sunk in Lübeck Bay. | 54.065°N 60.45°W | |||
![]() | 23 January 1962 | A freighter that was stranded on Grosser Vogelsand off the mouth of the Elbe River. | |||
14 March 1945 | A training ship that struck a naval mine northwest of Fehmarn. | 54.5608°N 10.875°W | |||
![]() | 6 December 1961 | A British freighter that was stranded on Grosser Vogelsand off the mouth of the Elbe River. | |||
13 August 1944 | A Vorpostenboot that was sunk by British aircraft off Spiekeroog. | 53.8333°N 47°W | |||
19 April 1917 | A that was being used as a mine hulk when a naval mine exploded on board, sinking Seeadler in the Jade Bight. | 53.4833°N 20°W | |||
2 May 1945 | A Type IIB U-boat that was scuttled at Wilhelmshaven. | 53.5167°N 18°W | |||
2 May 1945 | A Type IIC U-boat that was scuttled at Wilhelmshaven. | ||||
2 May 1945 | A Type IIC U-boat that was scuttled at Wilhelmshaven. | ||||
15 April 1945 | A Type IXB U-boat that was sunk by Canadian bombers at Kiel. | 54.326°N 10.164°W | |||
5 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled near Schleimünde. | 54.6167°N 13°W | |||
4 April 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by British bombs at Kiel. | ||||
3 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled at Neustadt after taking damage from British aircraft. | ||||
16 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk, possibly by a mine, in the Elbe estuary. | 53.8333°N 58°W | |||
2 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled near Travemünde. | 53.9667°N 63°W | |||
3 May 1945 | A Type VIIC/41 U-boat that was scuttled near Nordenham. | 53.5°N 38°W | |||
3 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled near Wilhelmshaven. | 53.5167°N 18°W | |||
December 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled off Warnemünde. | ||||
30 March 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by American aircraft near Hamburg. | 53.55°N 66°W | |||
30 March 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by American aircraft near Hamburg. | 53.55°N 66°W | |||
15 October 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by British aircraft off Wilhelmshaven. | 53.85°N 18°W | |||
30 March 1945 | A Type IXC/40 U-boat that was sunk by American bombs at Bremen. | 53.0667°N 58°W | |||
24 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that ran aground and was scuttled at Amrum. | 54.6333°N 31°W | |||
3 April 1945 | A Type IXC/40 U-boat that was sunk by US aircraft at Kiel. | 54.3333°N 20°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
RFA Bedenham | 27 April 1951 | A naval armament carrier that exploded at Gun Wharf. | |||
![]() | 10 October 2008 | A cargo ship that ran aground at Europa Point in gale-force winds. | |||
![]() | 12 August 2007 | A cargo ship that collided with Torm Gertrud off Europa Point. | 36.1017°N -5.3458°W | ||
1 March 1694 | An English ship-of-the-line lost in a severe storm. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antikythera wreck | Unknown | Unknown | A wreck on Antikythera island that contained the Antikythera mechanism and dates from approximately 86 BC. | 35.8897°N 23.3078°W | |
19 July 1940 | A light cruiser that was sunk in the Battle of Cape Spada. | ||||
21 November 1916 | A White Star Liner sunk by flooding after striking a mine near the isle of Kea. | 37.7014°N 24.2839°W | |||
Dimitrios shipwreck | ![]() | 23 December 1981 | A small freight ship that was swept away by the sea from the port of Gythio and left stranded on a sandy beach. | ||
Dokos shipwreck | Unknown | c. 2200 BCE | The oldest known underwater shipwreck discovery, dating to c. 2200 BCE. | ||
13 November 1943 | A that was attacked by German aircraft in the Battle of Leros and scuttled. | 36.8333°N 57°W | |||
15 August 1940 | A protected cruiser that was sunk by the Italian submarine Delfino off Tinos. | 37.5358°N 25.1508°W | |||
![]() | 26 September 2000 | A RO-RO passenger ferry that capsized after hitting a rock off the island of Paros. | |||
22 May 1941 | A light cruiser that was sunk by German dive bombers in the Battle of Crete. | 35.8333°N 23°W | |||
22 May 1941 | A G-class destroyer that was sunk by German dive bombers northwest of Crete. | 36°N 33°W | |||
29 May 1941 | An H-class destroyer that was sunk by German dive bombers off Crete. | 35.3333°N 46°W | |||
22 October 1943 | A that struck a mine east of Kalymnos. | 36.9833°N 33°W | |||
22 April 1941 | A Greek destroyer that was sunk by German bombers off Kardiotissa. | ||||
27 September 1943 | An that was sunk by German aircraft at Leros. | 37.1167°N 77°W | |||
![]() | 21 October 1988 | A cruise ship that collided with an Italian freighter off Piraeus. | 37.925°N 23.6083°W | ||
23 May 1941 | A K-class destroyer that was sunk by German dive bomber aircraft south of Gavdos. | 34.6667°N 34°W | |||
23 May 1941 | A K-class destroyer that was sunk by German dive bomber aircraft south of Gavdos. | 34.6667°N 34°W | |||
20 January 1918 | An monitor that was sunk in the Battle of Imbros. | 40.2286°N 25.9628°W | |||
![]() | 11 January 2003 | An ocean liner that capsized in Elevsis Bay. | |||
Mimis | ![]() | 8 July 1943 | sank the Greek sailing vessel Mimis with explosives, off Skiathos, Greece. | ||
Nordland | ![]() | August 2000 | Cargo ship that ran aground off the port of Diakofti in Kithira Island[2] where its stern can be seen jutting out of the water still. | ||
![]() | 1 October 1980 | A coastal trading ship run aground on the isle of Zakynthos, while allegedly smuggling cigarettes from Turkey. | 37.8596°N 20.6249°W | ||
Patris | 1868 | A wheel steamboat lost off Kea Island. | 37.5789°N 24.2629°W | ||
6 December 1941 | A submarine sunk by a naval mine near the island of Kefalonia. | 37.9°N 20.9°W | |||
![]() | 6 April 2007 | A Greek cruise ship that struck a reef off the harbor of Santorini island and sank the following day. | 36.3947°N 25.4308°W | ||
![]() | 9 December 1941 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by off Methoni, while carrying 2,000 UK and Dominion prisoners of war. | 36.8167°N 63°W | ||
![]() | 27 April 1941 | A troopship that was sunk by German aircraft south of Spetses during the Battle of Greece. | 37.02°N 23.17°W | ||
24 June 1669 | A French warship that sunk off Heraklion after an accidental explosion of the powder-keg. | ||||
1942 | A German U-boat that sunk at Saronikos Gulf after hitting a Greek mine. | ||||
24 September 1944 | A German Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled near Salamis Island. | 37.9833°N 57°W | |||
26 September 1943 | A Greek destroyer sunk by Luftwaffe bombers in the port of Leros island. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 January 1942 | A cutter that was torpedoed by off Reykjavík, and sank the next day. | 64.1°N -22.56°W | |||
![]() | 10 November 1944 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by off Gardskagi. Totals of 42 casualties and 21 survivors. | 6.1°N -67°W | ||
5 July 1942 | A that was sunk by a mine off the Westfjords. | 66.5833°N -37°W | |||
25 September 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that sank in the Denmark Strait. | 67°N -23°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 29 December 1916 | A British steamship that ran aground in fog on Kedge Rocks near Baltimore Island. | 51.4611°N -9.3456°W | ||
![]() | 27 January 1918 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by northeast of Rathlin Island. | 55.3333°N -18°W | ||
27 October 1914 | A British battleship that sank after striking a German mine near Lough Swilly. | ||||
Bolivar | ![]() | 4 March 1947 | A Norwegian motor vessel that ran aground on the Kish Bank during a snow storm.[3] | ||
![]() | 17 July 1918 | A Cunard Line transatlantic passenger steamship famous for coming to the rescue of in 1912. It was torpedoed and sunk by German U-boat . | 49.4667°N -19.7667°W | ||
![]() | 28 December 1917 | A Elders & Fyffes cargo liner and banana boat running the Avonmouth to Jamaica route. She struck a mine laid by 0.5nmi SE of Black Head lighthouse in Belfast Lough and sank, without loss of life. | |||
![]() | 8 May 1916 | A steamship that was torpedoed by German submarine . | |||
Dido | 1883 | A barque that sank off Kedge Island, near Baltimore, County Cork.[4] | 51.4667°N -28°W | ||
![]() | 19 November 1850 | A passenger sailing vessel that sank off the coast of Kilkee, County Clare. | |||
![]() | 28 October 1940 | An ocean liner bombed by aircraft and then torpedoed and sunk by . | 55.2667°N -59°W | ||
![]() | 28 October 1927 | A sailing ship that caught fire and was abandoned at sea. | |||
![]() | 30 January 1886 | A cargo ship that sunk in a storm off the coast of Kilkee, County Clare. 17 lost their lives. | |||
![]() | 3 January 1908 | A tanker that ran aground off the Maidens. | |||
May 1884 | A very broken-up steamer that sank after colliding with the cliffs in fog on the eastern side of Cape Clear Island, County Cork.[5] | 51.4333°N -38°W | |||
![]() | 23 May 1918 | A steamer that was torpedoed by 26km (16miles) east of the Kish Light Vessel. | |||
![]() | December 1986 | A ore-bulk-oil carrier that sank with its cargo of iron ore when sailing from Sept-Îles, Quebec to the River Clyde.[6] | 51.4667°N -23°W | ||
![]() | 25 February 1917 | A Cunard Line ocean liner sunk near Fastnet Rock by German submarine . | 52°N -53°W | ||
![]() | 1588 | A ship of the Spanish Armada that was driven aground at Streedagh Strand, then in Cairbre, now County Sligo. | |||
![]() | 1588 | A ship of the Spanish Armada that was driven aground at Streedagh Strand, then in Cairbre, now County Sligo. | |||
![]() | 25 January 1917 | An armed merchantman that struck two naval mines off Lough Swilly. | 55.262°N -6.818°W | ||
5 October 1909 | A that was wrecked off Blacksod Bay. | ||||
![]() | 10 October 1918 | The Dublin to Holyhead mailboat, torpedoed and sunk 6km (04miles) east of the Kish Lighthouse by . | |||
27 June 1918 | A hospital ship that was torpedoed by, with the loss of 234 lives. | 51.3°N -9.9°W | |||
![]() | 7 May 1915 | A British ocean liner torpedoed and sunk by the German U-boat . | |||
![]() | 7 September 1917 | An ocean liner torpedoed by German submarine near Fastnet Rock. | |||
![]() | 8 March 1960 | A cargo ship, wrecked off the coast of Inisheer, the smallest of the Aran Islands, and has since been thrown above high tide mark at Carraig na Finise. Islanders rescued the entire crew from the stricken vessel – an event captured in a pictorial display at the National Maritime Museum in Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin. The wreck appears in the opening credits of the comedy series Father Ted. | |||
![]() | 11 March 1982 | A Spanish container ship on charter to the Icelandic shipping company, Hafskip. It was washed onto rocks at Dunmore head, near Slea Head on the Dingle Peninsula after losing engine power in a storm. The 15 crew members were rescued by the local rocket team and an Royal Air Force helicopter. Some of the wreck was removed in 1991 due to filming, and the bow and other wreckage is still visible today. | 52.1092°N -10.4683°W | ||
Rochdale and Prince of Wales | 20 November 1807 | The sinking of the Rochdale and the Prince of Wales in Dublin Bay resulted in 400 deaths and the building of a new harbour. | 53.3016°N -6.1571°W | ||
Rockingham | 23 December 1775 | A vessel that ran aground near Cobh. | |||
![]() | 12 December 1987 | A crane barge that ran aground at Ardmore. | |||
![]() | 1588 | A ship of the Spanish Armada that was driven aground at Streedagh Strand, then in Cairbre, now County Sligo. | |||
![]() | 21 January 1854 | A White Star Line clipper that ran aground and sank off Lambay Island 8km (05miles) from Dublin Bay. | 53.4817°N -6.02°W | ||
![]() | 1588 | At 1,100 tonnes, one of the Spanish Armada's largest ships; wrecked 32km (20miles) west of Lacada Point in Kinnagoe Bay, County Donegal. | |||
![]() | February 2002 | A fishing boat that sank 11km (07miles) off Kilkeel. | 54.06°N -5.993°W | ||
22 March 1916 | A Type U 66 submarine that was sunk by off Dingle. | 51.9°N -63°W | |||
12 March 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled 6km (04miles) south of Glandore. | 51.25°N -14°W | |||
9 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled as part of Operation Deadlight. | 55.5833°N -53°W | |||
4 December 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was surrendered to the Allies. It was towed offshore to be scuttled as part of Operation Deadlight, but sank before reaching the scuttling ground. | 55.5333°N -14°W | |||
31 December 1945 | A Type IXC/40 U-boat that was surrendered to the British and sank under tow northwest of Tory Island. | 55.5°N -33°W | |||
3 January 1946 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled northwest of Malin Head as part of Operation Deadlight. | 55.5167°N -37°W | |||
31 December 1945 | A Type IXD2 U-boat that was scuttled as part of Operation Deadlight. | 55.4167°N -22°W | |||
26 September 1917 | A Type UC II submarine that was sunk by HMS PC61 in St. George's Channel. | 51.9167°N -20°W | |||
10 September 1917 | A Type UC II submarine that sank for unknown reasons off Roche's Point. | 51.7333°N -20°W | |||
22 November 1884 | A gunboat wrecked off Tory Island. | ||||
12 December 1917 | A that collided with Rosemary off Arranmore. | ||||
29 October 1758 | An East Indiaman that was deliberately mis-piloted by prisoners who had taken over another vessel.[7] |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 11 January 2000 | A scallop dredger that sunk in a storm off Ramsey, and was later raised and laid up at Douglas. | 54.0975°N -4.1644°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caligula's Giant Ship | Roman Empire | Unknown | The remains of a wooden barge discovered in Fiumicino. | ||
![]() | 14 October 1964 | A cargo ship that developed a leak and sank south of Savona. | 44.2°N 46°W | ||
F174 | ![]() | December 1996 | An unidentified ship carrying illegal immigrants to Sicily, sunk with the loss of at least 283 lives. For five years, the wreck's existence was kept from the authorities by local fishermen, who feared an investigation would interfere with their livelihood. | ||
Giglio Island shipwreck | Unknown | Unknown | An Etruscan wreck off Giglio Island, dating to the early Iron Age, c. 600 BC.[8] | ||
1 April 1942 | A light cruiser that was sunk by off Stromboli. | 38.7089°N 15.0086°W | |||
![]() | 14 April 1991 | A VLCC oil tanker that sunk off Genoa following an onboard explosion and fire, becoming the largest wreck in the Mediterranean Sea. | 44.22°N 8.46°W | ||
22 November 1943 | A that was sunk by a naval mine off Bari. | 41.1333°N 68°W | |||
25 February 1944 | An that was sunk by a German bomber aircraft off Nettuno. | 41.4333°N 50°W | |||
23 January 1944 | A J-class destroyer that was sunk by a German torpedo bomber aircraft off Anzio. | 41.4333°N 50°W | |||
![]() | 13 October 1942 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by about 8nmi west of Capo Gallo, near Palermo, Sicily. | |||
Marsala Punic shipwreck | Punic | Unknown | The wreck of a warship (Punic Ship) and of another vessel (Sister Ship) discovered in the harbour of Marsala in, believed to date from around 235 BC. | ||
Nemi ships | Roman Empire | Unknown | Two large ships built by the Roman emperor Caligula at Lake Nemi in the 1st century AD. The wrecks were recovered from the lake in 1932, and largely destroyed by fire during World War II. | 41.7222°N 12.7017°W | |
14 June 1940 | An that was sunk by Italian destroyers in the Gulf of Taranto. | 39.5°N 17.5°W | |||
16 April 1943 | A P-class destroyer that was damaged by Italian ships and scuttled off Mazara del Vallo. | ||||
22 January 1944 | An that was sunk by a naval mine off Nettuno. | 41.4°N 56°W | |||
22 September 1907 | An ocean liner that sank during its launch.[9] | ||||
9 September 1943 | A that was sunk by German aircraft off Asinara. | ||||
23 August 1943 | An that was sunk by German dive bomber aircraft off Palermo, Sicily. | 38.1333°N 35°W | |||
3 November 1880 | A barque and convict ship that sank off Rio Marina. | ||||
29 January 1944 | A that was sunk by German aircraft off Anzio. | 41.4339°N 12.6839°W | |||
9 July 1944 | An that was sunk by a naval mine off Anzio. | 41.5167°N 40°W | |||
14 March 1943 | A T-class submarine that was sunk by the Italian corvette Cicogna off Sicily. | 38.25°N 13.25°W | |||
Torero | ![]() | 1 November 1916 | A cargo ship that was sunk by north of Palermo, Sicily. | 38.5°N 41°W | |
![]() | 4 May 1917 | An ocean liner that was torpedoed by near Bergeggi Island, Savona. | |||
28 May 1944 | A naval trawler that was sunk by American motor torpedo boats off Deiva Marina. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
29 November 1951 | A concrete ship that ran aground in a storm en route from Helsinki to Riga. The wreck is above the surface of the water. | |||
Moero | 22 September 1944 | A troopship that was sunk by Soviet bomber aircraft while carrying evacuees from Estonia. Nearly 2,700 out of 3,350 people aboard were killed. | ||
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 November 1941 | A Type VIIC U-boat that collided with the target ship Angelburg west of Klaipėda. | 55.75°N 60°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 April 1916 | A Royal Navy yacht that was sunk by mines laid by | ||||
19 April 1907 | A that ran aground on a breakwater outside Grand Harbour. | ||||
![]() | 12 March 2002 | A Turkish cargo ship that took on water and sank off Malta due to bad weather. | 35.51°N 14.53°W | ||
![]() | 12 August 2006 | A Gozo ferry that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | 36.0175°N 14.2866°W | ||
26 May 1942 | A drifter converted into a minesweeper that struck a mine off Grand Harbour. | ||||
Gozo Phoenician shipwreck | Phoenician | Late 7th century BC | Phoenician trade ship discovered in 2007 by a team of French scientists during a sonar survey off the coast of Gozo island. | ||
7 April 1942 | A tugboat that was sunk by German or Italian aircraft at Grand Harbour, then raised and scuttled off Valletta. | ||||
![]() | 29 August 2022 | An oil tanker which ran aground at Qawra on 10 February 2018, then deliberately scuttled as an artificial reef off Xatt l-Aħmar, Gozo in 2022.[10] | 36.0175°N 14.2886°W | ||
![]() | 19 July 1999 | A Gozo ferry that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | |||
2 May 1941 | A J-class destroyer that struck a naval mine off Grand Harbour. | 35.9°N 45.4°W | |||
![]() | 12 August 2006 | A Captain Morgan ferry boat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | 36.0175°N 14.2866°W | ||
16 June 1942 | A that struck a mine during Operation Harpoon. | 35.8833°N 49°W | |||
Lady Davinia | ![]() | 2008 | The tour boat (formerly a minesweeper) that sunk off its moorings at Sliema. | 35.9067°N 44.446°W | |
![]() | 1952 | A cable ship that was decommissioned and scuttled off the Grand Harbour. | |||
![]() | 29 November 1916 | A collier that was sunk by a torpedo fired by . | |||
12 February 1942 | A that was sunk by German aircraft at Grand Harbour, then raised and scuttled off Valletta. | 35.9047°N 14.5189°W | |||
19 April 1941 | A French passenger ship that was sunk by German aircraft in Kalkara. | ||||
28 April 1916 | An sloop that was sunk by naval mines laid by | ||||
8 May 1942 | An that was sunk by a mine. | 35.9167°N 49°W | |||
14 August 2007 | A patrol boat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | 35.9878°N 14.3286°W | |||
25 August 2009 | A patrol boat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | 36.0167°N 34°W | |||
31 July 2021 | A Bremse-class patrol boat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef.[11] [12] | ||||
![]() | 10 August 1918 | A French passenger ship that was sunk by a torpedo fired by . | |||
![]() | September 1992 | A tugboat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | 40.6503°N 14.5456°W | ||
27 April 1916 | A predreadnought battleship that was sunk by mines laid by | 35.9°N 50°W | |||
10 May 1942 | A German E-boat that was sunk by a mine (probably laid by herself or another E-boat). | ||||
S- | August 1947 | One of six captured German E-boats that were scuttled off Marsaxlokk. | |||
30 May 1942 | A British Admiralty tugboat that struck a naval mine off Grand Harbour. | ||||
![]() | 16 May 1998 | A Tanac type tugboat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | |||
24 March 1942 | A that hit a naval mine and sunk shortly after the Second Battle of Sirte. | 35.8833°N 49°W | |||
30 April 1946 | An S-class submarine that was sunk as a target. | 35.9827°N 40.773°W | |||
![]() | 20 June 2013 | A tugboat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | |||
![]() | 16 May 1998 | A Melita type tugboat that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. | |||
![]() | 2 September 1998 | A Libyan oil tanker that suffered an internal explosion on 3 February 1995, and remained at Valletta for three years before being scuttled as an artificial reef. | 35.82°N 41.04°W | ||
![]() | 6 March 1942 | A fuel lighter that was sunk by German or Italian aircraft at Manoel Island. | 35.904°N 14.502°W | ||
![]() | 12 November 1999 | A Gozo ferry that was decommissioned and scuttled as an artificial reef. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 5 December 1915 | Fresnel was one of 18 s built for the French Navy (French: Marine Nationale) in the first decade of the 20th century. In 1915, while on close blockade duty off Cattaro, Fresnel was detected and pursued by Austrian warships and aircraft. She was driven aground at the mouth of the Bojana river near Ulcinj, scuttled and abandoned. | |||
12 February 1942 | A paddle steamer that was confiscated by the occupying Italians during World War II, then seized and scuttled in Lake Skadar by members of the Yugoslav Partisans. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 11 November 1947 | A tanker that struck a naval mine off Terschelling. | 53.5333°N 7°W | ||
![]() | 20 February 1907 | A ferry that was sunk near Hook of Holland during a storm. | |||
![]() | 26 August 1945 | A troopship that struck a naval mine and was beached at the Zuid-Steenbank. | |||
20 August 1917 | An E-class submarine that was sunk about 6nmi northwest of Texel. | 53.1023°N 4.5578°W | |||
Hertha Engeline Fritzen | 26 October 1941 | A steamship that ran aground near the Nieuwe Waterweg. | |||
14 May 1940 | A sloop-of-war that was sunk by German aircraft off Zijpe. | 52.8369°N 4.5656°W | |||
Katowice | ![]() | 1949 | A Polish cargo ship sunk near Terschelling during a storm. | ||
HMS Lutine | 9 October 1799 | A that ran aground on a sandbank off Terschelling with a large cargo of gold. | |||
Palmwood shipwreck | 1650–1660[13] [14] | Discovered in 2009 off Texel in the Wadden Sea | |||
![]() | 26 September 1883 | A passenger ship that ran aground off Haamstede. | 51.6856°N 3.6139°W | ||
24 October 1895 | A cargo ship that foundered near Terschelling. | ||||
21 January 1915 | A Type U 5 U-boat that was sunk by friendly fire from . | 53.43°N 6.2°W | |||
29 November 1917 | A Type UB III U-boat that was sunk by a mine off Vlieland. | 53.3333°N 60°W | |||
21 August 1916 | A Type UC I U-boat that was torpedoed by . | 52.0333°N 57°W | |||
3 February 1735 | A Dutch East Indiaman that was lost after striking a sand bank off the coast of Vlissingen, Zeeland. Everyone of the 461 sailors, soldiers and merchants aboard perished. The wreck was discovered in late 1981. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 March 1725 | A Dutch East India Company ship that sank in a storm off Runde. In 1972, 57,000 gold and silver coins were recovered from the wreck. | ||||
Z22 Anton Schmitt | 11 April 1940 | A Type 1936 destroyer that was sunk in the First Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
![]() | 14 September 1942 | A tanker that was torpedoed by southwest of Bear Island. | 76°N 18°W | ||
![]() | 13 September 1941 | A cargo liner that sunk by British aircraft about 2nmi west of Tranøy Lighthouse. | |||
Z11 Bernd von Arnim | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1934A destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
30 April 1940 | A sloop that was sunk by German aircraft at Namsos. | 64.4667°N 41°W | |||
![]() | 4 May 1940 | A Norwegian steamship that was bombed during World War II at Rørvik. | |||
9 April 1940 | An heavy cruiser that was sunk at the Battle of Drøbak Sound. | ||||
26 August 1949 | A that caught fire and sank off Hammerfest. | 71.5833°N 58°W | |||
26 May 1940 | A that was sunk by German aircraft in the Ofotfjord. | 68.559°N 16.558°W | |||
Z17 Diether von Roeder | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1936 destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
Dresden | 20 June 1934 | A German steamer stranded 20nmi from Haugesund near Blikshavn on the island of Karmøy, whilst undertaking a cruise. | 59.2019°N 5.3189°W | ||
![]() | 1 May 1940 | A troopship that was sunk by German aircraft near Gratangen. | |||
18 May 1940 | A heavy cruiser that struck a rock near Bodø and was scuttled. | ||||
9 April 1940 | An that was torpedoed by German destroyers at Narvik. | ||||
Z12 Erich Giese | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1934A destroyer that was sunk by British ships in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
Z13 Erich Koellner | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1934A destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
Fernedale | 16 December 1944 | A German World War II freighter that ran aground. Next morning Allied aircraft discovered the ship(s) and destroyed them. Twin wreck of Parat. | |||
13 April 1940 | A minelayer that was scuttled while under attack from German forces in the Stjørnfjord. | ||||
26 April 1940 | A that was sunk by German aircraft. | 61.0781°N 5.8319°W | |||
![]() | February 1974 | A deep-sea trawler sunk in the Barents Sea. | |||
Z2 Georg Thiele | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1934 destroyer that was run aground in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
4 May 1940 | A that was bombed by German aircraft in Rombaken. | ||||
Haakon Jarl II | ![]() | 17 June 1924 | An iron steamship sunk in the Vestfjorden following collision with another ship. | ||
1 March 1941 | A German fish factory transport ship sunk by a British destroyer in Lofoten. | ||||
Z18 Hans Lüdemann | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1936 destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
10 April 1940 | An H-class destroyer that was attacked by German destroyers and ran aground at Vidrek. | 68.4°N 29°W | |||
![]() | 13 February 1944 | A civilian cargo ship that was sunk by a Royal Norwegian Navy torpedo boat off Kristiansund. | |||
10 April 1940 | An H-class destroyer that was sunk by German destroyers in the First Battle of Narvik. | 68.4147°N 17.1728°W | |||
Z19 Hermann Künne | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1936 destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
![]() | 13 February 1944 | A civilian cargo liner that was sunk by a Royal Norwegian Navy torpedo boat off Kristiansund. | 49.4833°N -47°W | ||
9 April 1940 | A light cruiser that was torpedoed by and scuttled off Kristiansand. | 58.0667°N 12°W | |||
25 December 1717 | A frigate wrecked off Hvaler in the Christmas flood of 1717. | ||||
Malmberget | Unknown | 28 November 1913[15] | |||
![]() | 22 September 1939 | A cargo ship that was sunk by in Skagerrak. | 58.4°N 56°W | ||
24 December 1994 | Soviet-era cruiser, grounded while being towed to India for scrapping. | 70.636°N 21.9567°W | |||
![]() | 7 September 1943 | A Norwegian steamship that grounded during WWII at Rørvik. | |||
10 May 1940 | A troopship that was sunk by British warships at Hemnesberget. | ||||
9 April 1940 | An that was sunk by the Z11 Bernd von Arnim at Narvik. | ||||
20 November 1931 | An O-class submarine that was used for an Arctic expedition and was later scuttled in Byfjorden. | ||||
10 September 1939 | An that was sunk by friendly fire from . | 58.5°N 35°W | |||
21 October 1942 | A cargo liner that was sunk by a New Zealand torpedo bomber aircraft, killing 986 people, most of them prisoners of war. | ||||
Parat | 16 December 1944 | A rescuing steamer that was called into help by Fernedale. Allied aircraft discovered the ships and destroyed them.Twin wreck of Fernedale. | |||
9 June 1940 | A passenger/cargo ship that sunk by German aircraft in the Norwegian Sea whilst carrying troops. | ||||
27 November 1944 | A prisoner-of-war transport that was sunk by Supermarine Seafire fighters and Fairey Firefly dive-bombers from the Royal Navy aircraft carrier, south of Sandnessjøen, with 2,572 deaths. | 65.8211°N 12.3361°W | |||
18 April 1940 | A that was sunk in action with German warships in the Hardangerfjord | ||||
![]() | 30 September 1943 | A steamship that was sunk by six Bristol Beaufighters aircraft from the Canadian 404 Squadron off the islet of Buholmen. | |||
26 December 1943 | A sunk in the Battle of North Cape. | ||||
13 April 1940 | A cargo ship that was damaged in crossfire and sunk at Dvergsnestangen. | ||||
![]() | 4 May 1940 | A Norwegian steamship that was bombed during World War II at Rørvik. | |||
![]() | 18 May 1940 | A cargo ship that was sunk by a German bomber aircraft off Dyrøya. | |||
20 April 1940 | A that was sunk in action with German warships in the Hardangerfjord | ||||
13 April 1940 | A that ran aground and sank in Hordaland | ||||
10 April 1940 | A T-class submarine that was torpedoed by off Stavanger. | 59°N 5°W | |||
12 November 1944 | A that was sunk by British aircraft off Tromsø in Operation Catechism. | ||||
15 September 1915 | A Type U 5 U-boat that was torpedoed by off Stavanger. | 58.9167°N 15°W | |||
15 April 1940 | A Type VIIB U-boat that was sunk by and near Harstad. | 68.8833°N 75°W | |||
24 July 1943 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by US aircraft at Trondheim. | 63.45°N 33°W | |||
4 May 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by British aircraft off Harstad during Operation Judgement. | 68.8°N 54°W | |||
19 December 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that collided with German depot ship MRS 25 in the Vestfjorden. | ||||
9 February 1945 | A Type IXD2 U-boat that was scuttled by while on a logistics mission to Japan. | 60.7694°N 4.6208°W | |||
24 February 1943 | A U-class submarine that ran into a minefield southwest of Fugløyvær. | 67.0833°N 44°W | |||
Z21 Wilhelm Heidkamp | 11 April 1940 | A Type 1936 destroyer that was sunk in the First Naval Battle of Narvik. | |||
Z9 Wolfgang Zenker | 13 April 1940 | A Type 1934A destroyer that was scuttled in the Second Naval Battle of Narvik. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 February 1945 | A German luxury passenger liner turned armoured transport ship that was torpedoed and sunk by . | 54.6833°N 67°W | |||
16 August 1947 | Germany's only aircraft carrier in World War II, scuttled after the war by the Soviet Navy. | ||||
20 August 1943 | A Type VIIC U-boat that sank in a collision with Bolkoburg in Gdańsk Bay. | 54.8333°N 34°W | |||
4 February 1944 | A Type IXC/40 U-boat that struck a naval mine north of Świnoujście. | 54.0167°N 30°W | |||
30 January 1945 | A passenger ship on a rescue mission torpedoed and sunk by in the Baltic Sea. Over 9,000 people were killed. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 20 November 1926 | A cargo ship that ran aground off the Berlengas Islands. | ||
2 April 1804 | An that ran aground 9nmi south of Cape Mondego. | |||
Cais do Sodré shipwreck | 16th century | Found in Lisbon in April 1995, during the excavation of a subway station. | ||
Maria Grecia | ![]() | Unknown | A freight vessel sunk off the coast of Sesimbra, in the early 20th century. | |
Nossa Senhora da Luz | 7 November 1615 | Carrying Chinese and Burmese porcelain, pots and copper utensils, the caravel sunk in Porto Pim, (island of Faial) in the Azores during a storm, with a loss of 150 men. | 38.5167°N -65°W | |
17 December 1916 | A Spanish war frigate sunk in the bay of Sesimbra. | |||
The Pepper Wreck | Portuguese East India Company | 14 September 1606 | A Portuguese Indiaman found at the mouth of the Tagus. | |
Pimpao de Odemira | 18 May 1904 | A Portuguese freight vessel sank off the coast of Cabo Espichel. | ||
River Gurara | ![]() | 1989 | A Nigerian freight vessel sank off the coast of Cabo Espichel, Setubal. | |
Run'her | 1863 | A Confederate steamship that sank in the Angra do Heroísmo Bay. | ||
2 February 1786 | A man-of-war that sank near Peniche with a cargo of treasure. | |||
26 November 1916 | A that was torpedoed by off Lisbon. | 39.1667°N -58°W | ||
3 June 1945 | A Type VIIC/41 U-boat that was scuttled off Porto. | 41.15°N -49°W | ||
Woodham | ![]() | 9 December 1876 | A British steamboat sunk off the coast of Lisbon. | |
Unknown | Between 1575 and 1625 | A ship sunk off the coast of Cascais, carrying Chinese ceramics, pepper and cowries.[16] | ||
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 19 February 1981 | A Greek cargo ship, ran ashore at Vama Veche. The crew was saved but the ship remained on the spot. For many years, it remained visible above the water, but decayed over time due to rust and waves. The shipwreck is now completely under the water. | |||
15 October 1968 | A Greek freighter, grounded off Costinesti; part of an insurance fraud. | ||||
14 October 1942 | A that struck a mine 6nmi from Constanta. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 August 1986 | An ocean liner that collided with Pyotr Vasev in Tsemes Bay. | ||||
![]() | 5 May 1855 | A British sailing vessel sunk in a collision with HMS Medina in the Black Sea near Balaklava. | |||
7 November 1941 | A Soviet hospital ship sunk by German torpedo-carrying aircraft; estimated over 5,000 casualties. | 44.25°N 51°W | |||
17 February 1945 | A that was torpedoed by in the Kola Inlet. | 69.4°N 75°W | |||
10 July 2011 | A Russian cruise ship lost in a storm on the Volga River.[17] | ||||
13 February 1945 | A that was torpedoed by and sank under tow in the Kola Inlet. | 69.3333°N 66°W | |||
16 January 1945 | A that was sunk off the Murman Coast. | 69.25°N 39°W | |||
6 September 1982 | Soviet submarine scuttled in the Kara Sea by the Soviet Navy. The boat had suffered irreparable nuclear reactor plant damage at sea in 1968. Both nuclear reactors are still on board. | 72.5167°N 85°W | |||
30 August 2003 | A Soviet-era submarine that accidentally sank while being towed for scrapping in the Barents Sea. She was decommissioned in 1989, prior to sinking, but both of her nuclear reactors are still on board. | 69.3773°N 82.51°W | |||
17 January 1942 | A that was torpedoed by off Teriberka. | 69.35°N 62°W | |||
3 December 1944 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by near Semiostrovskiy Reid. | 68.7333°N 86°W | |||
29 April 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by three British frigates north of Murmansk. | 69.4833°N 70°W | |||
26 January 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was scuttled at Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) after taking damage in a Soviet air raid. | 54.7°N 52°W |
See also: List of shipwrecks of Gibraltar.
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 April 1937 | An sunk by a naval mine off Santander. | 43.5239°N -3.6789°W | |||
Bajo la Campana Phoenician shipwreck | Phoenicia | Seventh century BC | A Phoenician trade ship suken in the seventh century BC a short distance from Cartagena, Spain. Excavated as of 2006. | ||
9 November 1918 | A that was torpedoed by off Cape Trafalgar. | 35.8833°N -58°W | |||
12 December 1936 | A Spanish C-class submarine that was torpedoed by about 4nmi southeast of Málaga. | ||||
6 September 1870 | A warship that capsized in a storm off Cape Finisterre. | ||||
![]() | 5 December 1987 | A cargo ship that caught fire and was grounded off Cape Finisterre. | |||
![]() | 1 April 1882 | A Royal Mail Ship that sank off the coast of Cape Finisterre after colliding with the Spanish steamship Yrurac Bat. | |||
27 August 1943 | An sloop sunk by enemy aircraft near Vigo. | 42.1667°N -31°W | |||
![]() | 12 July 1943 | A UK troopship sunk by UK torpedoes after German aerial bombardment left her burning. | 41.25°N -39°W | ||
1985 | A that was scuttled off Cartagena. | 38.05°N 133.2°W | |||
12 April 1970 | A that caught fire and sank while being towed in the Bay of Biscay. Four nuclear warheads and two nuclear reactors are still on board. | ||||
23 October 1805 | A Spanish wrecked in the Bay of Cádiz. | ||||
![]() | 13 August 1992 | A merchant ship that sank off Ribadesella. It lies on sand at a depth of 50m (160feet). | 43.4839°N -5.016°W | ||
![]() | 19 November 2002 | An oil tanker that sank off Galicia. | 42.8833°N -62°W | ||
4 August 1906 | An Italian merchant steamship which ran aground on a reef off Cape Palos and the Hormigas Islands off the Spanish coast, killing hundreds of migrants to Argentina. | 37.6519°N -0.6529°W | |||
28 March 1943 | A German Type VIIC U-boat sunk off Cartagena. | ||||
2 August 1943 | A German Type IXB U-boat sunk by enemy aircraft off Cape Ortegal. | 46.5833°N -66°W | |||
18 June 1941 | A German Type IID U-boat sunk by depth charges off Cadiz. | ||||
17 July 1942 | A German Type VIIC U-boat sunk by depth charges off Cape Ortegal. | ||||
28 May 1943 | A German Type VIIC U-boat sunk off Isla de Alborán. | ||||
![]() | 1 April 1882 | A Spanish steamship that sank off the coast of Cape Finisterre after colliding with RMS Douro. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 September 1944 | An Italian liner that sank near Koper after being hit by rockets fired by Royal Air Force aircraft. |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 September 1919 | A cargo ship that collided with Normandie off Dalarö. | ||||
Dalarö wreck | Unknown | 17th century | A shipwreck discovered in 2003 off Dalarö. | ||
![]() | 1 November 2006 | A RORO ferry that capsized in a storm. | 56.7508°N 17.2517°W | ||
![]() | 1495 | Warship discovered in the 1970s, one of the best-preserved wrecks from the late medieval period. | 56.1448°N 15.2209°W | ||
![]() | 2 March 2004 | A towboat that foundered in heavy weather and was wrecked near Grundkallen. | |||
![]() | 1 December 1950 | A cargo ship that capsized 5nmi off Sandhammaren. | |||
1 June 1676 | The largest warship in the Swedish navy during the Scanian War. It sank in rough weather in the Battle of Öland, and was rediscovered in 1980. | 56.4494°N 16.6722°W | |||
Luleå Northern Harbour Wreck | Unknown | c1700 | A wreck in Luleå Northern Harbour measuring by made from wood dated to approximately 1700. Discovered during the Sailing World Cup held in Luleå in 1988 and dated in 2011. | ||
31 May 1564 | A Swedish warship that was sunk north of Öland during the Northern Seven Years' War. | ||||
2 January 1940 | A Soviet S-class submarine that hit a naval mine west of Åland. | ||||
21 October 1942 | A Soviet S-class submarine that was torpedoed by off Stockholm. | 59.85°N 51°W | |||
Som | 10 May 1916 | A that sank in a collision in the Sea of Åland. | 60°N 74°W | ||
21 December 1926 | A three-masted schooner, built 1902, that sank in a storm off the coast of Öland. | ||||
10 August 1628 | A Swedish warship that foundered on her maiden voyage and sank in Stockholm. | 59.3278°N 18.0911°W | |||
7 September 1944 | A prisoner transport that was sunk by a naval mine off Marstrand. | 57.7797°N 11.4561°W |
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 April 2022 | A that was hit by two Neptune missiles fired by Ukrainians in the Russo-Ukrainian War 80nmi south of Odesa. | 45.1786°N 30.9253°W | |||
Novorossiysk | 29 October 1955 | A Conte di Cavour-class battleship that exploded in Sevastopol Bay, resulting in 608 deaths. | |||
11 May 1854 | A steam frigate that was grounded in the Crimean War 5nmi southwest of Odesa. |
See main article: List of shipwrecks of the United Kingdom.