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MS Rigel III

The MS Rigel III is a cruiseferry owned by the Greek-based company Ventouris Ferries. She was built in 1979 as MS Turella by Wärtsilä Turku shipyard, Finland for SF Line for use in Viking Line traffic. In 1988 she was sold to Stena Line, becoming MS Stena Nordica. In 1996, she was transferred to Lion Ferry and was renamed MS Lion King. In 1998, she was sold to Tallink and renamed MS Fantaasia. As Fantaasia she also sailed under charter to Algérie Ferries, Comanav and Kystlink during the years 2005–2008. Following the end of her charter to Kystlink in 2008 the latter company bought her, renaming her MS Kongshavn. After Kystlink was declared bankrupt in late 2008 the ship was laid up until sold to the Croatia-based ferry operator Blue Line International,[4] and operated on their service between Split and Ancona as MS Regina della Pace. In 2017 the ship was sold to the Greek-based company Ventouris Ferries and is currently operating on the route Bari-Durres.

Rigel III at Durrës in 2017.
History
Name
  • 1979–1988: Turella
  • 1988–1996: Stena Nordica
  • 1996–1998: Lion King
  • 1998–2008: Fantaasia
  • 2008–2010: Kongshavn
  • 2010-2017: Regina della Pace
  • 2017–Present: Rigel III
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
Ordered17 March 1978
BuilderWärtsilä Turku shipyard, Finland
Yard number1242
Launched21 November 1978
Sponsored byMargareta Lundqvist[2]
Christened21 November 1978
Completed1979
Acquired4 June 1979
In service4 June 1979
IdentificationIMO number: 7807744
StatusIn service
General characteristics (as built)[1]
TypeCruiseferry
Tonnage
Length136.11 m (446 ft 7 in)
Beam24.20 m (79 ft 5 in)
Draught5.40 m (17 ft 9 in)
Ice class1 A[3]
Installed power
Speed21.5 kn (39.82 km/h)
Capacity
  • 1700 passengers
  • 740 passenger beds
  • 554 cars
General characteristics (Stena Nordica and after)[3]
Tonnage16,405 GT
Decks10
Speed19 kn (35.19 km/h)
Capacity
  • 1,550 passengers
  • 1,440 lanemeters
NotesOtherwise the same as built

Concept and construction edit

SF Line begun planning for a new larger ferry for the Viking Line traffic between South-West Finland and Sweden in the mid-1970s. The main person in charge of the design of the new ship was SF Line's founder and CEO Gunnar Eklund, with her son Nils-Erik Eklund and the company's technical inspector Kaj Jansson participating in the design process. Experiences from SF Line's previous new buildings — particularly MS Aurella of 1973 — heavily influenced the design of the new vessel, which was drawn with large car-decks. However, the new vessel was planned to be twice as large in terms of gross register tonnage as Aurella, and she was to have twice as many cabins.[2]

In 1976, SF Line asked for tenders from various shipyards around the world for construction of a 1,700-passenger, 540-car ferry. The cheapest bid, 80 million Finnish markka (20 million United States dollar by exchange rates of the time), was made by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of Japan who outbid the Finnish Wärtsilä shipyard by 36 million markka. On 13 September 1977, SF Line signed a contract with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for construction of a ferry. However, the funding of the project was subject to approval by the Bank of Finland and as at the time the employment level in Finland's shipyards was low, the Bank of Finland decided not to grant its approval to the project's funding with hopes of forcing the company to order a ship from a Finnish shipyard. After prolonged negotiations between both SF Line and the Bank of Finland as well as SF Line and Wärtsilä, SF Line placed an order with Wärtsilä on 17 March 1978. In the end the cost of the ship from Wärtsilä was approximately 15% more expensive than it would have been if built by Mitsubishi,[2] despite a subvention of 17 million markka from the Bank of Finland.[1]

As with most previous new buildings of Viking Line, the details of the ship's interior design were entrusted to Robert Tillberg of Tillberg Design. Due to the ship's larger size, her onboard services could be greatly upgraded from the previous generation ships, with accommodation and public spaces close to the standards of the time's cruise ships. For the first time on a Viking Line ship trafficking between continental Finland and Sweden, the ship included an à la carte restaurant in addition to the traditional buffet (Rederi AB Slite's cruise ship SS Apollo III had an à la carte restaurant since 1976, but she only trafficked between the Åland islands and Sweden).[2][5] SF Line's new ship was also given large conference facilities by the day's standards, capable of hosting 80 people.[2]

The basic design of the new building was apparently successful, as even before she was completed SF Line's fellow Viking Line members Rederi AB Slite and Rederi Ab Sally asked access to the ship's plans so that they could order additional ships of the same design. However, in the end Slite opted to order a slightly larger vessel from Meyer Werft in Germany, while SF Line refused to give Sally access to the new ship's plans and as a result Sally too placed an order with Meyer Werft.[2]

The keel of SF Line's new building was laid on 10 August 1978.[6] She was launched from drydock on 24 November 1978 and christened MS Turella by Margareta Lundqvist, the widow of the major SF Line shareholder Fraenk Lundqvist. On 18 January 1979, SF Line ordered a sister ship for the Turella from Wärtsilä, which eventually entered service in 1980 as MS Rosella.[2] The construction of the Turella was completed on 4 June 1980 and she was delivered to SF Line on the same date,[6] 11 days earlier than agreed.[1]

History edit

1979–1987: Viking Line service edit

Immediately following delivery Turella entered service on Viking Line's TurkuMariehamnStockholm route, sailing parallel with Rederi AB Slite's slightly larger newbuilding MS Diana II that entered service on 14 June 1979. Turella remained on the Turku–Stockholm service until 2 June 1980, when she was transferred to the shorter and more freight-intensive Naantali–Mariehamn–Kapellskär route following the delivery of Rederi Ab Sally's new MS Viking Sally—that was even larger than Turella or Diana II—for the Turku service. On the Naantali–Kapellskär service Turella replaced the ageing MS Marella and initially sailed parallel to her brand-new sistership MS Rosella. For the summer season of 1981 Rosella and Diana II switched routes, and from that year onwards Turella again had Diana II as her routemate.[2]

1988–1996: Stena Line and Lion Ferry service edit

 
Stena Nordica

In September 1988, SF Line took delivery of the new MS Amorella, which replaced Rosella on the Turku–Stockholm route. Originally SF Line had agreed to sell the Rosella to Stena Line upon delivery of the new ship. However, due to the Amorella being delivered seven months behind schedule the Rosella could not be delivered to Stena when originally agreed. In the end the Turella was sold instead of Rosella, as it was generally in a better condition and easier to convert for the traffic Stena planned for her.[7] After rebuilding at Cityvarvet, Gothenburg, the Turella re-emerged as MS Stena Nordica (a name carried by many Stena Line ships over the years). Stena Nordica was placed a route connecting Gothenburg to Fredrikshavn in Denmark and Moss in Norway. She also occasionally served on the Gothenburg–Kiel route when the ships normally sailing that route were docked. In 1996, Stena Nordica was rebuilt at Öresundsvarvet, Landskrona, Sweden, transferred to the fleet of Stena's subsidiary Lion Ferry and renamed MS Lion King. During the next 1½ years she sailed on routes Halmstad (Sweden) – Grenå (Denmark) and Karlskrona (Sweden) – Gdynia (Poland).[1]

1996–2005: Tallink service edit

 
Fantaasia at Saint Petersburg.

At the end of 1997, Lion King was sold to Tallink, who renamed her MS Fantaasia and placed her on the HelsinkiTallinn route (where she served alongside her old Viking Line fleetmate MS Meloodia).[1] In 2002, after the delivery of the new MS Romantika, the Fantaasia was moved to the Tallinn–Stockholm route, where she sailed alongside another old fleetmate from the Viking Line days, MS Regina Baltica.[1][8][9] In 2004, the new MS Victoria I replaced Fantaasia on the Tallinn–Stockholm route,[10] and from the start of April of the same year Fantaasia opened a new Helsinki–Tallinn–St. Petersburg route for Tallink.[1] Due to a rise in port fees issued by the Russian government and due to visa regulations not being prognosed to get any better between Russia and the European Union as it had been presumed when the line was started, the line was terminated by Tallink on 2 January 2005.[11]

2005–2009: charters and Kystlink service edit

Following the collapse of the St. Petersburg traffic, the Fantaasia was swiftly chartered to Algérie Ferries for a duration of nine months, during which she sailed between France and Algeria. After the end of the charter she spent five months laid up in Tallinn until she was placed on Tallink's new Riga–Stockholm route in April 2006.[1] However after little over a month of traffic she was replaced by the larger Regina Baltica,[1][9] and subsequently chartered to Comanav until April 2007. Following the end of charter to Comanav, she was again chartered to Algérie Ferries until October 2007.[1]

 
Fantaasia at Strömstad during her charter to Kystlink

Following the second Algérie Ferries charter, the Fantaasia was chartered to the Norway-based Kystlink[12] for three months (with an option for three additional months) from October 2007 onwards[1][13] to replace their MS Pride of Telemark that was out of service following an accident when the ship rammed the breakwater at Hirtshals, Denmark.[14] Before entering service for Kystlink, Fantaasia was docked at Cityvarvet, Gothenburg.[15] On 15 November, the Swedish Maritime Authority Sjöfartsinspektionen deemed the ship unsafe and prohibited it from leaving Cityvarvet until 18 faults found during the inspection were fixed.[16] Twelve of the faults were considered severe, including several permanently open watertight doors, a non-functional loudspeaker system, blocked emergency exists and non-functional winches used for lowering lifeboats.[17][18] According to Tallink, the inspection was made while refitting of the ship was still in process, which they cited as the reason why several onboard systems were turned off-line and normal safety procedures were not observed.[19] On 11 December, the ship entered service with Kystlink on its Langesund–Hirtshals and Langesund–Strömstad routes.[1]

On 15 April 2008, the Fantaasia was sold by Tallink to Kystlink, with delivery date set for June of the same year. She was eventually delivered to her new owners on 30 June 2008, subsequently re-registered in Norway and renamed MS Kongshavn. However, Kystlink ceased their traffic on 21 October 2008, with the Kongshavn subsequently laid up at Sandefjord, Norway. In March 2009, Kongshavn was drydocked in Fredericia, Denmark.[1]

2010- 2017: Blue Line service edit

 
Regina della Pace in 2010
 
Regina della Pace at Split on July 15, 2011

On 23 December 2009 the Croatian ferry operator Blue Line International was reported to have purchased the Kongshavn, with the intention of using her on their service between Ancona and Split.[4] Blue Line took delivery of the ship on 17 March 2010, renamed her Regina della Pace and initially re-registered her under the Maltese flag. Prior to entering service with Blue Line on 19 April 2010, the Regina della Pace was re-registered to Panama.[1] The vessel continues in service and was seen in July 2012 on that route. In 2017 the ship was sold to Ventouris Ferries and renamed Rigel III[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Asklander, Micke. "M/S Turella (1979)". Fakta om Fartyg. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Sjöström, Pär-Henrik; Brzoza, Krzysztof (2009). Tie meren yli - Uranuurtajasta markkinajohtajaksi (in Finnish and English). Gothenburg: Breakater Publishing. pp. 131–140. ISBN 978-91-977697-9-2.
  3. ^ a b . Kystlink. Archived from the original on 14 July 2008. Retrieved 4 July 2008.
  4. ^ a b Zubčić, Gordan (23 December 2009). "Buljubašić kupio trajekt za Anconu vrijedan 6 milijuna eura" (in Croatian). Slobodna Dalmacija. Retrieved 30 December 2009.
  5. ^ Sjöström, Brzoza (2009). p. 122.
  6. ^ a b Sjöström, Brzoza (2009). p. 258.
  7. ^ (in Finnish) FCBS Forum: Sliten konkurssin syyt ja seuraukset + muuta 1980-90-l. taitteen Vikingistä, retrieved 10 October 2007
  8. ^ (in Swedish) Fakta om Fartyg: M/S Romantika (2002), retrieved 10 October 2007
  9. ^ a b (in Swedish) Fakta om Fartyg: M/S Viking Song (1980), retrieved 10 October 2007
  10. ^ (in Swedish) Fakta om Fartyg: M/S Victoria (2004), retrieved 10 October 2007
  11. ^ (in Finnish) Tallink press release reprinted at the FCBS Forum, retrieved 10 October 2007
  12. ^ (in Norwegian) Varden: Kystlink hyrer finsk ferje, retrieved 10 October 2007
  13. ^ OMX Group: CORRECTION: Chartering Fantaasia, retrieved 19 October 2007
  14. ^ Aftenposten english article reprinted at the FCBS Forum, retrieved 18 October 2007
  15. ^ (in Finnish) FCBS Forum: Fantaasia vuokrataan Kystlinkille?, retrieved 18 October 2007
  16. ^ (in Swedish) Göterborgs-Posten 17. 11. 2007: Färja kvar i hamn med allvarliga fel, retrieved 17 November 2007
  17. ^ (in Swedish) GT.se 17. 11. 2007: Personfärjan panikstoppad, retrieved 17 November 2007
  18. ^ (in Estonian) Postimees.ee 17. 11. 2007: Tallinki parvlaev kuulutati Rootsis sõidukõlbmatuks 2007-11-18 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 17 November 2007
  19. ^ (in Estonian) Postimees.ee 17 November 2007: Tallinki ohutusjuht: Fantaasia oli ülevaatuse ajal remondis 20 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, 18 November 2007
  20. ^ "Waiting to board the ferry marko polo". 14 May 2012.

External links edit

    rigel, cruiseferry, owned, greek, based, company, ventouris, ferries, built, 1979, turella, wärtsilä, turku, shipyard, finland, line, viking, line, traffic, 1988, sold, stena, line, becoming, stena, nordica, 1996, transferred, lion, ferry, renamed, lion, king,. The MS Rigel III is a cruiseferry owned by the Greek based company Ventouris Ferries She was built in 1979 as MS Turella by Wartsila Turku shipyard Finland for SF Line for use in Viking Line traffic In 1988 she was sold to Stena Line becoming MS Stena Nordica In 1996 she was transferred to Lion Ferry and was renamed MS Lion King In 1998 she was sold to Tallink and renamed MS Fantaasia As Fantaasia she also sailed under charter to Algerie Ferries Comanav and Kystlink during the years 2005 2008 Following the end of her charter to Kystlink in 2008 the latter company bought her renaming her MS Kongshavn After Kystlink was declared bankrupt in late 2008 the ship was laid up until sold to the Croatia based ferry operator Blue Line International 4 and operated on their service between Split and Ancona as MS Regina della Pace In 2017 the ship was sold to the Greek based company Ventouris Ferries and is currently operating on the route Bari Durres Rigel III at Durres in 2017 HistoryName1979 1988 Turella 1988 1996 Stena Nordica 1996 1998 Lion King 1998 2008 Fantaasia 2008 2010 Kongshavn 2010 2017 Regina della Pace 2017 Present Rigel IIIOwner1979 1988 SF Line 1988 1996 Stena Line 1996 1997 Lion Ferry 1997 2008 Tallink 2008 2010 Kystlink 2010 2017 Blue Line International 2017 Present Ventouris FerriesOperator1979 1988 SF Line in Viking Line traffic 1988 1996 Stena Line 1996 1997 Lion Ferry 1997 2005 Tallink 2005 Algerie Ferries 2006 Tallink 2006 2007 Comanav 2007 Algerie Ferries 2007 2008 Kystlink 2010 2017 Blue Line International 2017 Present Ventouris FerriesPort of registry1979 1988 Finland Mariehamn 1988 1996 Sweden Gothenburg 1996 1998 Sweden Halmstad 1998 2008 Estonia Tallinn 2008 2010 Norway Langesund 2010 2010 Malta Valletta 2010 2014 Panama Panama City 2014 Present Cyprus Limassol 1 Ordered17 March 1978BuilderWartsila Turku shipyard FinlandYard number1242Launched21 November 1978Sponsored byMargareta Lundqvist 2 Christened21 November 1978Completed1979Acquired4 June 1979In service4 June 1979IdentificationIMO number 7807744StatusIn serviceGeneral characteristics as built 1 TypeCruiseferryTonnage10 604 GRT 3 700 tonnes deadweight DWT Length136 11 m 446 ft 7 in Beam24 20 m 79 ft 5 in Draught5 40 m 17 ft 9 in Ice class1 A 3 Installed power4 Wartsila Pielstick 12PC2 2V diesels 17 650 kW 23 670 hp Speed21 5 kn 39 82 km h Capacity1700 passengers 740 passenger beds 554 carsGeneral characteristics Stena Nordica and after 3 Tonnage16 405 GTDecks10Speed19 kn 35 19 km h Capacity1 550 passengers 1 440 lanemetersNotesOtherwise the same as built Contents 1 Concept and construction 2 History 2 1 1979 1987 Viking Line service 2 2 1988 1996 Stena Line and Lion Ferry service 2 3 1996 2005 Tallink service 2 4 2005 2009 charters and Kystlink service 2 5 2010 2017 Blue Line service 3 References 4 External linksConcept and construction editSF Line begun planning for a new larger ferry for the Viking Line traffic between South West Finland and Sweden in the mid 1970s The main person in charge of the design of the new ship was SF Line s founder and CEO Gunnar Eklund with her son Nils Erik Eklund and the company s technical inspector Kaj Jansson participating in the design process Experiences from SF Line s previous new buildings particularly MS Aurella of 1973 heavily influenced the design of the new vessel which was drawn with large car decks However the new vessel was planned to be twice as large in terms of gross register tonnage as Aurella and she was to have twice as many cabins 2 In 1976 SF Line asked for tenders from various shipyards around the world for construction of a 1 700 passenger 540 car ferry The cheapest bid 80 million Finnish markka 20 million United States dollar by exchange rates of the time was made by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of Japan who outbid the Finnish Wartsila shipyard by 36 million markka On 13 September 1977 SF Line signed a contract with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for construction of a ferry However the funding of the project was subject to approval by the Bank of Finland and as at the time the employment level in Finland s shipyards was low the Bank of Finland decided not to grant its approval to the project s funding with hopes of forcing the company to order a ship from a Finnish shipyard After prolonged negotiations between both SF Line and the Bank of Finland as well as SF Line and Wartsila SF Line placed an order with Wartsila on 17 March 1978 In the end the cost of the ship from Wartsila was approximately 15 more expensive than it would have been if built by Mitsubishi 2 despite a subvention of 17 million markka from the Bank of Finland 1 As with most previous new buildings of Viking Line the details of the ship s interior design were entrusted to Robert Tillberg of Tillberg Design Due to the ship s larger size her onboard services could be greatly upgraded from the previous generation ships with accommodation and public spaces close to the standards of the time s cruise ships For the first time on a Viking Line ship trafficking between continental Finland and Sweden the ship included an a la carte restaurant in addition to the traditional buffet Rederi AB Slite s cruise ship SS Apollo III had an a la carte restaurant since 1976 but she only trafficked between the Aland islands and Sweden 2 5 SF Line s new ship was also given large conference facilities by the day s standards capable of hosting 80 people 2 The basic design of the new building was apparently successful as even before she was completed SF Line s fellow Viking Line members Rederi AB Slite and Rederi Ab Sally asked access to the ship s plans so that they could order additional ships of the same design However in the end Slite opted to order a slightly larger vessel from Meyer Werft in Germany while SF Line refused to give Sally access to the new ship s plans and as a result Sally too placed an order with Meyer Werft 2 The keel of SF Line s new building was laid on 10 August 1978 6 She was launched from drydock on 24 November 1978 and christened MS Turella by Margareta Lundqvist the widow of the major SF Line shareholder Fraenk Lundqvist On 18 January 1979 SF Line ordered a sister ship for the Turella from Wartsila which eventually entered service in 1980 as MS Rosella 2 The construction of the Turella was completed on 4 June 1980 and she was delivered to SF Line on the same date 6 11 days earlier than agreed 1 History edit1979 1987 Viking Line service edit Immediately following delivery Turella entered service on Viking Line s Turku Mariehamn Stockholm route sailing parallel with Rederi AB Slite s slightly larger newbuilding MS Diana II that entered service on 14 June 1979 Turella remained on the Turku Stockholm service until 2 June 1980 when she was transferred to the shorter and more freight intensive Naantali Mariehamn Kapellskar route following the delivery of Rederi Ab Sally s new MS Viking Sally that was even larger than Turella or Diana II for the Turku service On the Naantali Kapellskar service Turella replaced the ageing MS Marella and initially sailed parallel to her brand new sistership MS Rosella For the summer season of 1981 Rosella and Diana II switched routes and from that year onwards Turella again had Diana II as her routemate 2 1988 1996 Stena Line and Lion Ferry service edit nbsp Stena NordicaIn September 1988 SF Line took delivery of the new MS Amorella which replaced Rosella on the Turku Stockholm route Originally SF Line had agreed to sell the Rosella to Stena Line upon delivery of the new ship However due to the Amorella being delivered seven months behind schedule the Rosella could not be delivered to Stena when originally agreed In the end the Turella was sold instead of Rosella as it was generally in a better condition and easier to convert for the traffic Stena planned for her 7 After rebuilding at Cityvarvet Gothenburg the Turella re emerged as MS Stena Nordica a name carried by many Stena Line ships over the years Stena Nordica was placed a route connecting Gothenburg to Fredrikshavn in Denmark and Moss in Norway She also occasionally served on the Gothenburg Kiel route when the ships normally sailing that route were docked In 1996 Stena Nordica was rebuilt at Oresundsvarvet Landskrona Sweden transferred to the fleet of Stena s subsidiary Lion Ferry and renamed MS Lion King During the next 1 years she sailed on routes Halmstad Sweden Grena Denmark and Karlskrona Sweden Gdynia Poland 1 1996 2005 Tallink service edit nbsp Fantaasia at Saint Petersburg At the end of 1997 Lion King was sold to Tallink who renamed her MS Fantaasia and placed her on the Helsinki Tallinn route where she served alongside her old Viking Line fleetmate MS Meloodia 1 In 2002 after the delivery of the new MS Romantika the Fantaasia was moved to the Tallinn Stockholm route where she sailed alongside another old fleetmate from the Viking Line days MS Regina Baltica 1 8 9 In 2004 the new MS Victoria I replaced Fantaasia on the Tallinn Stockholm route 10 and from the start of April of the same year Fantaasia opened a new Helsinki Tallinn St Petersburg route for Tallink 1 Due to a rise in port fees issued by the Russian government and due to visa regulations not being prognosed to get any better between Russia and the European Union as it had been presumed when the line was started the line was terminated by Tallink on 2 January 2005 11 2005 2009 charters and Kystlink service edit Following the collapse of the St Petersburg traffic the Fantaasia was swiftly chartered to Algerie Ferries for a duration of nine months during which she sailed between France and Algeria After the end of the charter she spent five months laid up in Tallinn until she was placed on Tallink s new Riga Stockholm route in April 2006 1 However after little over a month of traffic she was replaced by the larger Regina Baltica 1 9 and subsequently chartered to Comanav until April 2007 Following the end of charter to Comanav she was again chartered to Algerie Ferries until October 2007 1 nbsp Fantaasia at Stromstad during her charter to KystlinkFollowing the second Algerie Ferries charter the Fantaasia was chartered to the Norway based Kystlink 12 for three months with an option for three additional months from October 2007 onwards 1 13 to replace their MS Pride of Telemark that was out of service following an accident when the ship rammed the breakwater at Hirtshals Denmark 14 Before entering service for Kystlink Fantaasia was docked at Cityvarvet Gothenburg 15 On 15 November the Swedish Maritime Authority Sjofartsinspektionen deemed the ship unsafe and prohibited it from leaving Cityvarvet until 18 faults found during the inspection were fixed 16 Twelve of the faults were considered severe including several permanently open watertight doors a non functional loudspeaker system blocked emergency exists and non functional winches used for lowering lifeboats 17 18 According to Tallink the inspection was made while refitting of the ship was still in process which they cited as the reason why several onboard systems were turned off line and normal safety procedures were not observed 19 On 11 December the ship entered service with Kystlink on its Langesund Hirtshals and Langesund Stromstad routes 1 On 15 April 2008 the Fantaasia was sold by Tallink to Kystlink with delivery date set for June of the same year She was eventually delivered to her new owners on 30 June 2008 subsequently re registered in Norway and renamed MS Kongshavn However Kystlink ceased their traffic on 21 October 2008 with the Kongshavn subsequently laid up at Sandefjord Norway In March 2009 Kongshavn was drydocked in Fredericia Denmark 1 2010 2017 Blue Line service edit nbsp Regina della Pace in 2010 nbsp Regina della Pace at Split on July 15 2011On 23 December 2009 the Croatian ferry operator Blue Line International was reported to have purchased the Kongshavn with the intention of using her on their service between Ancona and Split 4 Blue Line took delivery of the ship on 17 March 2010 renamed her Regina della Pace and initially re registered her under the Maltese flag Prior to entering service with Blue Line on 19 April 2010 the Regina della Pace was re registered to Panama 1 The vessel continues in service and was seen in July 2012 on that route In 2017 the ship was sold to Ventouris Ferries and renamed Rigel III 20 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Asklander Micke M S Turella 1979 Fakta om Fartyg Retrieved 26 May 2010 a b c d e f g h Sjostrom Par Henrik Brzoza Krzysztof 2009 Tie meren yli Uranuurtajasta markkinajohtajaksi in Finnish and English Gothenburg Breakater Publishing pp 131 140 ISBN 978 91 977697 9 2 a b Kystlink M S Kongshavn Kystlink Archived from the original on 14 July 2008 Retrieved 4 July 2008 a b Zubcic Gordan 23 December 2009 Buljubasic kupio trajekt za Anconu vrijedan 6 milijuna eura in Croatian Slobodna Dalmacija Retrieved 30 December 2009 Sjostrom Brzoza 2009 p 122 a b Sjostrom Brzoza 2009 p 258 in Finnish FCBS Forum Sliten konkurssin syyt ja seuraukset muuta 1980 90 l taitteen Vikingista retrieved 10 October 2007 in Swedish Fakta om Fartyg M S Romantika 2002 retrieved 10 October 2007 a b in Swedish Fakta om Fartyg M S Viking Song 1980 retrieved 10 October 2007 in Swedish Fakta om Fartyg M S Victoria 2004 retrieved 10 October 2007 in Finnish Tallink press release reprinted at the FCBS Forum retrieved 10 October 2007 in Norwegian Varden Kystlink hyrer finsk ferje retrieved 10 October 2007 OMX Group CORRECTION Chartering Fantaasia retrieved 19 October 2007 Aftenposten english article reprinted at the FCBS Forum retrieved 18 October 2007 in Finnish FCBS Forum Fantaasia vuokrataan Kystlinkille retrieved 18 October 2007 in Swedish Goterborgs Posten 17 11 2007 Farja kvar i hamn med allvarliga fel retrieved 17 November 2007 in Swedish GT se 17 11 2007 Personfarjan panikstoppad retrieved 17 November 2007 in Estonian Postimees ee 17 11 2007 Tallinki parvlaev kuulutati Rootsis soidukolbmatuks Archived 2007 11 18 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 17 November 2007 in Estonian Postimees ee 17 November 2007 Tallinki ohutusjuht Fantaasia oli ulevaatuse ajal remondis Archived 20 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine 18 November 2007 Waiting to board the ferry marko polo 14 May 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to IMO 7807744 Blue Line official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MS Rigel III amp oldid 1154622065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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