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Sovereign Class

Sovereign of the Seas Nassau Bahamas (244161813) (cropped).jpg
MS Sovereign as Sovereign of the Seas.
Class overview
Builders: Chantiers de l’Atlantique; Saint-Nazaire, France
Operators:
Preceded by: Song of America
Succeeded by: Vision class
Built: 1987-1992
Completed: 3 Ships
Active: 3 Ships
General characteristics
Tonnage: 73,192-73,941 gt
Length: 268.33 m (880.3 ft)
Beam: 32.21 m (105.7 ft)
Draft: 7.55 m (24.8 ft)
Decks: 12
Installed power:

4 × 9-cyl, Pielstick-Alsthom diesels

combined 21844 kW[2]
Propulsion: Two controllable pitch propellers rear; two thrusters each side forward
Speed: 21.5 kts
Capacity: 2,744 passengers
Crew: 833

4 × 9-cyl, Pielstick-Alsthom diesels

The Sovereign class is Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd's third generation of cruise ships, currently being operated by Royal Caribbean International and Pullmantur Cruises.

The three ships of the class were built in Saint-Nazaire, France at the Chantiers de l'Atlantique shipyards. The first modern "megaships" to be built, they also were the first series of cruise ships to include a multi-story atrium with glass elevators. They also had a single deck devoted entirely to cabins with private balconies instead of oceanview cabins. The first ship, the Sovereign of the Seas launched in 1988, was the world's largest passenger ship in service, breaking the record held by the SS Norway (originally designed as an ocean liner.Sovereign held this distinction until 1990 when Norway succeeded her after being refurbished with the addition of two more decks. In 1991, Royal Caribbean International launched a slightly modified sister ship, the Monarch of the Seas. In 1992, the line launched its third and final sister ship, the Majesty of the Seas. These ships were among the largest modern cruise ships to sail during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

During that time, other major cruise lines also followed suit, building ships that included many of the same features and similar dimensions as the Sovereign class. Carnival Cruise Lines launched the Fantasy class in 1990, comparable in size to the Sovereign class and also featuring a multi-story atrium with glass elevators. Princess Cruises also countered by launching two ships in 1990 and 1991 to compete with the Sovereign class, the Crown Princess and the Regal Princess. They also featured an atrium and two decks devoted to cabins with private balconies instead of windowed "oceanview" cabins. Since then, newer and larger ships have exceeded the size of the Sovereign-class ships. 'They are less than half the size of the Freedom-class ships and about a third the size of Oasis-class ships.


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Wikipedia

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