The RMS Titanic, once hailed as an unsinkable marvel of luxury and engineering, remains history’s most famous shipwreck following its catastrophic collision with an iceberg on April 15, 1912. The disaster stemmed from a combination of human error and design limitations, including the captain’s failure to reduce speed, the inability to spot ice in calm waters, and insufficient lifeboat capacity. While 1,500 lives were lost, the tragedy forced a global shift in maritime safety, leading to mandatory lifeboat drills and 24-hour radio monitoring for all vessels. Today, the wreck lies 4,000 meters deep in the Atlantic Ocean, serving as both a historical site and a subject of intense debate regarding the ethics of salvaging artifacts from a mass grave. These events transformed the Titanic from a symbol of industrial power into a cautionary tale that fundamentally reshaped international travel regulations.
Sign in to continue reading, translating and more.
Continue