Zürcher Nachrichten - The enduring allure of the Titanic

EUR -
AED 3.869613
AFN 71.922253
ALL 98.007682
AMD 410.513317
ANG 1.904506
AOA 960.844526
ARS 1051.657842
AUD 1.629706
AWG 1.891136
AZN 1.78986
BAM 1.953959
BBD 2.13369
BDT 126.281049
BGN 1.957037
BHD 0.396626
BIF 3120.760397
BMD 1.053558
BND 1.416666
BOB 7.302122
BRL 6.107421
BSD 1.056705
BTN 88.78367
BWP 14.446392
BYN 3.458243
BYR 20649.728972
BZD 2.130094
CAD 1.483947
CDF 3018.44312
CHF 0.936055
CLF 0.037431
CLP 1027.502144
CNY 7.619854
CNH 7.626203
COP 4740.03512
CRC 537.793425
CUC 1.053558
CUP 27.919276
CVE 110.161234
CZK 25.269569
DJF 188.172751
DKK 7.458892
DOP 63.670026
DZD 140.317828
EGP 51.991803
ERN 15.803364
ETB 127.970758
FJD 2.397845
FKP 0.831591
GBP 0.834997
GEL 2.881437
GGP 0.831591
GHS 16.881099
GIP 0.831591
GMD 74.802359
GNF 9106.422199
GTQ 8.161312
GYD 220.981846
HKD 8.203553
HNL 26.686862
HRK 7.515299
HTG 138.919145
HUF 407.90432
IDR 16749.774802
ILS 3.950108
IMP 0.831591
INR 89.002175
IQD 1384.296061
IRR 44346.873229
ISK 145.022369
JEP 0.831591
JMD 167.82192
JOD 0.747077
JPY 162.644533
KES 136.851093
KGS 91.131247
KHR 4268.978832
KMF 491.563658
KPW 948.201441
KRW 1470.687417
KWD 0.324011
KYD 0.88067
KZT 525.145339
LAK 23220.127783
LBP 94630.163047
LKR 308.719202
LRD 194.43685
LSL 19.224991
LTL 3.110882
LVL 0.637287
LYD 5.161138
MAD 10.535076
MDL 19.200914
MGA 4915.369964
MKD 61.552021
MMK 3421.91399
MNT 3579.98867
MOP 8.473518
MRU 42.184265
MUR 49.738625
MVR 16.277514
MWK 1832.373994
MXN 21.440687
MYR 4.709931
MZN 67.321197
NAD 19.224991
NGN 1755.037163
NIO 38.883374
NOK 11.686851
NPR 142.054192
NZD 1.795968
OMR 0.405118
PAB 1.056705
PEN 4.011621
PGK 4.248998
PHP 61.877023
PKR 293.400931
PLN 4.322151
PYG 8245.233396
QAR 3.852271
RON 4.976911
RSD 116.886898
RUB 105.330958
RWF 1451.332916
SAR 3.957304
SBD 8.83979
SCR 14.581462
SDG 633.712788
SEK 11.571755
SGD 1.414032
SHP 0.831591
SLE 23.842835
SLL 22092.581096
SOS 603.931127
SRD 37.206907
STD 21806.515209
SVC 9.24629
SYP 2647.094929
SZL 19.217898
THB 36.650077
TJS 11.264789
TMT 3.697987
TND 3.33396
TOP 2.467539
TRY 36.300796
TTD 7.175241
TWD 34.216183
TZS 2810.852316
UAH 43.648785
UGX 3878.346788
USD 1.053558
UYU 45.347285
UZS 13526.25893
VES 48.181414
VND 26749.82748
VUV 125.080475
WST 2.941102
XAF 655.339702
XAG 0.034643
XAU 0.00041
XCD 2.847292
XDR 0.79605
XOF 655.339702
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.257661
ZAR 19.162264
ZMK 9483.276853
ZMW 29.012671
ZWL 339.245118
  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

The enduring allure of the Titanic
The enduring allure of the Titanic / Photo: PETER MUHLY - AFP/File

The enduring allure of the Titanic

Since it sank on its maiden voyage more than a century ago, the Titanic has had an unshakeable grip on the public imagination.

Text size:

A monument to the technological progress of its time -- and the hubris of men who thought they had built an unsinkable ship -- one of the world's deadliest ocean disasters has inspired books, blockbuster movies, stage productions and countless adventurers who want to see what happened when the luxury liner hit an iceberg.

Among them, the wealthy passengers and crew of a submersible that vanished Sunday in the North Atlantic Ocean on their way to visit the seabed wreck, on a $250,000 ticket.

An all-hands search and rescue operation to find their tiny sub before the oxygen runs out was playing out Wednesday as the world watched and waited.

- Palace of luxury -

RMS Titanic set sail on its maiden voyage in April 1912 from Southampton, England bound for New York.

At the time, it was the largest ship ever built, a vast floating palace of luxury, where first-class passengers had the run of a gymnasium, squash court, swimming pool and top-notch dining options, or could retire to their lavish cabins where a staff of hundreds waited on their every whim.

Below decks, poor migrants were crammed into steerage quarters, desperate to get to the promise of the New World.

Late on April 14, the Titanic -- carrying 2,224 passengers and crew -- hit an iceberg, denting and buckling the hull and allowing water to rush in.

As compartments flooded, the 269-meter (883-foot) vessel began sinking, bow first.

There were not enough lifeboats for everyone on board, and the harried crew did not know how to deploy them; some were dispatched just half full.

Overwhelmingly, those who made it onto the lifeboats were women and children, with men instructed to hang back.

Hours after she began tipping up, the huge ship snapped in two, and plunged into the depths.

Passengers who had not made it into the limited number of lifeboats perished within minutes in the freezing water.

Around 1,500 people died in the disaster. Just 700 were picked up by RMS Carpathia, a transatlantic steamship that had answered the Titanic's distress calls.

- Wreck -

The exact location of the wreck remained a mystery for 70 years until a Franco-American expedition discovered where it lay, 3,700 meters below the waves.

Footage from the ocean bed shows the two halves of the ship surrounded by a huge debris field -- furniture, shoes, plates and other detritus ejected from the vessel as it sank.

In the years since it was rediscovered, the wreck has been visited by researchers, explorers, tourists and filmmakers.

One of its most famous visitors was director James Cameron, whose 1997 smash "Titanic" starred Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet as passengers who fall in love.

The movie is known as much for Celine Dion's hit "My Heart Will Go On" as for a scene in which DiCaprio's character, Jack, rescues Winslet's Rose by pushing her aboard a floating door, sacrificing himself in the process.

Such is the film's enduring popularity, even a quarter century later debates and theories continue to swirl around whether there was actually room enough for Jack on the makeshift raft.

It is just one example of how the story of the Titanic "never seems to end for people," Cameron told a press conference held for the 25th anniversary re-release earlier this year.

"The Titanic has this kind of enduring, almost mythic, novelistic quality. And it has to do with, I think, love and sacrifice and mortality," he said.

"The men who stepped back from the lifeboats so that the women and the children could survive."

- Tourism -

While for many the Titanic is a historical curiosity -- as distant from today as the Parthenon or Pompeii -- for descendents of those who perished there is something distasteful about ultra-wealthy tourists spending heavily to visit the wreck.

"I think it's disgusting, quite honestly," 69-year-old John Locascio, whose two uncles died in the tragedy, told The Daily Beast.

"They died a horribly tragic death. Just leave the bodies resting," Locascio added. "They don't want people down to see them. Just leave well enough alone."

Auctions of Titanic memorabilia and artifacts remain popular, with an embroidered pink coat Winslet wore in filming the 1997 movie and a letter written by a Uruguayan passenger who died in the disaster both going under the hammer next week in separate sales.

The violin used by bandleader Wallace Hartley to play hymns on deck as the great ship went down -- a reminder of the Titanic's final moments -- sold in 2013 for $1.7 million.

W.Odermatt--NZN