Last modified: 2010-02-27 by jarig bakker
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INTEROCEANA Schiffahrtsgesellschaft mbH
The company was located in Hamburg. It is a white flag divided by two
horizontal red stripes. This flag has the same pattern like NYK line flags,
at least a variant.
Source: Deutsche Reedereien und ihre Erkennungszeichen”; 2nd ed.; Hamburg;
1956; p.23
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 4 Apr 2009
The flag is white with a cross, seemingly composed by 4 red and white
stripes in the vertical arms and 5 green and white stripes in the horizontal
arms, plus something yellow in the center. I'd advise you to take my GIF
with a grain of salt because it might include some errors.
As I read it, the caption seems to read "F. Jvers", but since another
"Jvers" was corrected as Ivers, I suppose the same thing happens here.
The first letter looks a lot like a J, though, but that's possibly a font
thing.
Jorge Candeias, 1 Dec 2004
The firm is F. Ivers & Co., Stettin (pre-WWII Germany). The flag
with the remarkable cross can be seen here (on-line 1912
Lloyd's Flags & Funnels) as No. 206 with probably the initial 'I'
in the centre of the cross which repeats the colours of the combined Swedish-Norwegian
flag I bet. (Not unusual, given the location.) But...by Neptune! it's a
'herring salad' in cross form!
Jan Mertens, 2 Dec 2004
Ivers & Arlt: In 1876 Christian Ivers and established the ship broker
company Ivers & Paulsen, located in Kiel. They attended ships of Sartori
& Berger, Johannes Ick and L.F.Mathies.
Since 1881 the company ran own vessels. Christian’s son Hans F. Ivers started
in 1910 a company as a representative of Ivers&Paulsen. In 1913 two
merchants from Königsberg, Curt Ivers and Max Arlt joined the company.
Max Arlt later established his own company, named Preußenlinie Arlt
& Co KG. Curt left the company in 1933 and was replaced by Emil Richard,
Horst Arlt, the son of Max joined the company in 1938.
The company had an intimate cooperation with Stinnes
K.I.A., it was limitated to ships that could be used in coastal and inland
shipping as well. At the end of WWII all the equipment based in Königsberg
got lost, but the fleet was saved and was transferred to Lübeck. In 1950
the company moved to Bremen, coastal shipping remained the main branch.
In 1952 the company established a coastal service in Ceylon. Due to this
purpose in 1953 the Ceylon Coastal Shipping Company was established, which
was renamed Sri Lanka Shipping in 1956. In 1962 enormous amounts for manning
of ships were needed and in 1963 the company went into bankruptcy first
time. Ferdinand Müller, a merchant from Bremen tried a revival of the company
in 1986 but he had to give up in November 1986.
Temporarely there existed also a Iversa Reederei GmbH (Kurt Ivers &
Arlt), running only one ship.
Source: www.marcollect.de, maintained by Klaus-Peter Bühne
Description of flag: It was a red flag. In its centre was a white shield,
containing a black cross, referring Königsberg. The Teutonic Order had
the same arms. The cross was superimposed by a white inscription, fimbriated
black “J&A”, “J” substituting “I”.
Source: “Deutsche Reedereien und ihre Erkennungszeichen”; 2nd
ed.; Hamburg; 1956; p.23
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 29 Oct 2009