Divers Recover Artifacts from the Titanic’s Sister Ship Britannic for the First Time

A handout photo obtained from the Greek Ministry of Culture on September 15, 2025 shows a member of a Greek-British search team holding a silver serving tray from the HMHS Britannic, a British hospital ship that sank near the Greek island of Kea in 1916 after hitting a mine during World War I. (Greek Culture Ministry / AFP)
A handout photo obtained from the Greek Ministry of Culture on September 15, 2025 shows a member of a Greek-British search team holding a silver serving tray from the HMHS Britannic, a British hospital ship that sank near the Greek island of Kea in 1916 after hitting a mine during World War I. (Greek Culture Ministry / AFP)
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Divers Recover Artifacts from the Titanic’s Sister Ship Britannic for the First Time

A handout photo obtained from the Greek Ministry of Culture on September 15, 2025 shows a member of a Greek-British search team holding a silver serving tray from the HMHS Britannic, a British hospital ship that sank near the Greek island of Kea in 1916 after hitting a mine during World War I. (Greek Culture Ministry / AFP)
A handout photo obtained from the Greek Ministry of Culture on September 15, 2025 shows a member of a Greek-British search team holding a silver serving tray from the HMHS Britannic, a British hospital ship that sank near the Greek island of Kea in 1916 after hitting a mine during World War I. (Greek Culture Ministry / AFP)

Divers have recovered artifacts from the Titanic's sister ship, the Britannic, for the first time since the ocean liner sank in the Aegean Sea more than a century ago after striking a mine during World War I.

The Culture Ministry in Greece said Monday that an 11-member deep-sea diving team conducted a weeklong operation in May to recover artifacts including the ship’s bell and the port-side navigation light.

The White Star Line’s Britannic, launched in 1914, was designed as a luxury cruise liner, but was requisitioned as a hospital ship during World War I. It was heading toward the island of Lemnos when it struck a mine and sank off the island of Kea, about 75 kilometers (45 miles) southeast of Athens, on Nov. 21, 1916.

The vessel, the largest hospital ship at the time, sank in less than an hour. Thirty of the more than 1,060 people on board died when the lifeboats they were in were struck by the ship’s still turning propellers.

The wreck lies at a depth of 120 meters (nearly 400 feet), making it accessible only to technical divers. The dive team used closed-circuit rebreather equipment in a recovery operation organized by British historian Simon Mills, founder of the Britannic Foundation, the Culture Ministry said.

Conditions on the wreck were particularly tough because of currents and low visibility, the ministry said. Among the items raised to the surface were artifacts reflecting both the ship’s utilitarian role and its luxurious design: the lookout bell, the navigation lamp, silver-plated first-class trays, ceramic tiles from a Turkish bath, a pair of passenger binoculars and a porcelain sink from second-class cabins.

The artifacts are now undergoing conservation in Greek capital Athens and will be included in the permanent collection of a new Museum of Underwater Antiquities under development at the port of Piraeus. The museum will feature a dedicated World War I section, with the items from the Britannic as a centerpiece.



Jazan Crafts Market Heritage Pavilion Revives Traditional Life and Culture

The Crafts Market offers an interactive cultural experience that blends storytelling and education - SPA
The Crafts Market offers an interactive cultural experience that blends storytelling and education - SPA
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Jazan Crafts Market Heritage Pavilion Revives Traditional Life and Culture

The Crafts Market offers an interactive cultural experience that blends storytelling and education - SPA
The Crafts Market offers an interactive cultural experience that blends storytelling and education - SPA

The Crafts Market in Jazan features an interactive heritage pavilion that narrates aspects of traditional life in the region, allowing visitors to experience folk customs, old games, women's traditional adornments, and cuisine that have preserved the community's identity across generations, according to SPA.

The Crafts Market, organized by the Alrowad Youth Association in Jazan and the Cultural House as part of the Year of Handicrafts 2025, offers an interactive cultural experience that blends storytelling and education.

It aims to connect new generations to the memory of place and time through dialogue and direct participation, attracting a large number of visitors who immerse themselves in the atmosphere of the village and old houses.

The experience fosters a space of joy, learning, and human connection.


King Saud University to Host Event on Saudi-Chinese Cultural Communication

King Saud University to Host Event on Saudi-Chinese Cultural Communication
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King Saud University to Host Event on Saudi-Chinese Cultural Communication

King Saud University to Host Event on Saudi-Chinese Cultural Communication

The King Saud University's Media Department is organizing a scholarly and cultural event on Tuesday focused on the future perspective of cultural communication between the Kingdom and China, SPA reported.

The event will address key areas, including the importance of cultural communication in the contemporary world, the established frameworks and experiences of the Saudi-Chinese cultural relationship, and future areas of integration and cooperation between the two countries.


Riyadh Hosts Final Session of Film Criticism Conference

The conference's three-day cultural program includes dialogue sessions, presentations, masterclasses, and film screenings - SPA
The conference's three-day cultural program includes dialogue sessions, presentations, masterclasses, and film screenings - SPA
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Riyadh Hosts Final Session of Film Criticism Conference

The conference's three-day cultural program includes dialogue sessions, presentations, masterclasses, and film screenings - SPA
The conference's three-day cultural program includes dialogue sessions, presentations, masterclasses, and film screenings - SPA

The final session of the Film Criticism Conference, organized by the Film Commission, kicked off Friday evening in Riyadh, bringing together a distinguished group of critics, academics, and filmmakers from the Kingdom and abroad to continue enriching the critical landscape and fostering cinematic dialogue in Saudi Arabia.

This Riyadh event is the third in a series organized across the Kingdom, following successful gatherings in Aseer and Al-Qatif.

The third edition focuses on the vital relationship between cinema and place, recognizing location as an essential element of visual storytelling and cultural identity, SPA reported.

The conference's three-day cultural program includes dialogue sessions, presentations, masterclasses, and film screenings.

It features more than 30 speakers and film experts from around the world, who will explore the presence of place in cinema as a visual and cultural space reflecting identity, memory, and social transformations.