Last modified: 2003-11-22 by marcus schmöger
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by Ivan Sache
emblem taken from the company website
http://www.oelsm.com/index1.html
The "Austrian Lloyd Trieste" was founded in 1833 by Karl Ludwig Freiherr von Bruck (1798-1860), on the model of the British Lloyd. In 1836, the
company opened a department "Steam Navigation" beside the early
department "Trade & Sea Reports". Therefore, 1836 is considered to be
the birth year of the shipping company.
In 1842, Ferdinand I (1793-1875), Emperor of Austria (1835-1848) allowed
the ships of the company to fly the postal flag and its officers and
crew to wear the Austrian uniform.
The "First Danubian Steam-Navigation Company" ceded in 1844 to the
"Austrian Lloyd" the line to Constantinople and Smyrna (now Istanbul and
Izmir, respectively, in Turkey). The "Austrian Lloyd" was also in charge
of the mail transport between England and India via Trieste and Alexandria.
In 1849, the company inaugurated its flagship "Vorwärts". The name of
the ship (lit., steaming ahead) became the motto of the company.
The Suez Canal was opened in 1869, allowing the "Austrian Lloyd" to
launch lines to Bombay (1869), Colombo (1879), Singapore and Hong-Kong
(1880). In 1886, the company operated 86 ships.
The "Austrian lines" started operating leisure cruises in 1907 and moved
its headquarters from Trieste to Vienna the same year. The inauguration
of the line to Shangai in 1912 was the last important fact of the early
history of the company, which was suppressed in 1918.
There was no Austrian deep-sea shipping company between the two World Wars. The "Austrian Lloyd" was recreated under the name of
"Oesterreichischer Lloyd Ship Management" in 1951. Its first fully-owned
ship, MS Arlberg, was launched in 1978.
The company has now offices in Austria, Germany, Cyprus, Malta, Greece
and Lebanon.
The house flag of the "Oesterreichischer Lloyd Ship Management" is black
with the company emblem in the middle. Postcards advertising cruises
seem to indicate that the "Austrian Lloyd" already used a similar house
flag with a blue field. Colour differences might be unsignificant, since
the black colour used on the website might be a very dark blue.
Ivan Sache, 9 November 2003
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