Leyla | Ss

The survivors clung to wooden debris and floating crates of medical supplies that miraculously stayed afloat. For 36 hours, they drifted in the cold Black Sea waters, with November temperatures hovering just above freezing. Sharks were not a threat (the Black Sea is too low in salinity for most sharks), but hypothermia was merciless.

By 1917, the had been requisitioned by the Ottoman Navy as a supply tender. She was tasked with a critical mission: transporting ammunition, field guns, and medical supplies from Varna, Bulgaria (a neutral port at the time, though sympathetic to the Central Powers), to the Ottoman port of Zonguldak, a coal hub critical for powering Ottoman warships. The Final Voyage: November 1917 On the foggy morning of November 12, 1917, the SS Leyla departed Varna with a crew of 64 Ottoman sailors, 12 German military advisors, and 18 civilian passengers (mostly nurses and war correspondents). She was lightly armed with two 88mm deck guns—pitiful defense against modern naval threats. ss leyla

The discovery confirmed the violence of the sinking: The is broken into two main sections, lying 45 meters apart. The bow section is upright; the stern is twisted and upside down. Most hauntingly, the team found human remains scattered near the engine room, a sobering reminder of the sudden death the crew faced. The survivors clung to wooden debris and floating

The explosion was catastrophic. The boiler burst, scalding engineers alive and snapping the keel of the in two. Eyewitness accounts (from survivors picked up two days later) describe a "mountain of fire and steam" rising 200 feet into the air. The Sinking The SS Leyla sank in less than four minutes. There was no time to launch lifeboats. Most passengers were asleep below deck and never stood a chance. Of the 94 people on board, only 17 survived. By 1917, the had been requisitioned by the

The Russian government, via a neutral Swedish intermediary, claimed the was carrying not only ammunition but also poison gas canisters destined for the Caucasus front. The Ottoman government vehemently denied this, insisting the ship was a "humanitarian vessel" carrying only medical supplies. To this day, no definitive proof of poison gas has emerged, but the controversy tainted the ship’s legacy. Wreck Discovery: 2006 For 89 years, the wreck of the SS Leyla rested in obscurity 110 meters below the surface. In August 2006, a team of Turkish marine archaeologists led by Dr. Selçuk Kolay of Dokuz Eylül University located the wreck using side-scan sonar.

The Morzh surfaced and fired a warning shot across the bow of the . Captain Rıza Bey ordered full speed ahead and a zigzag course, hoping to outrun the sub. It was a fatal miscalculation. The submarine fired two torpedoes. The first missed by 50 meters; the second struck the SS Leyla amidships, directly in the engine room.

When we think of great maritime disasters, names like Titanic , Lusitania , and Empress of Ireland immediately come to mind. However, the annals of nautical history are filled with lesser-known vessels whose stories are equally compelling—if not more mysterious. One such ship is the SS Leyla .

Infolinks 2013