Passenger
ships include ferries, which are vessels for day or
overnight short-sea trips moving passengers and vehicles
(whether road or rail); ocean liners, which typically
are passenger or passenger-cargo vessels transporting
passengers and often cargo on longer line voyages; and
cruise ships, which often transport passengers on round-trips,
in which the trip itself and the attractions of the
ship and ports visited are the principal draw.
An ocean liner is the traditional form of passenger
ship. Once such liners operated on scheduled line voyages
to all inhabited parts of the world. With the advent
of airliners transporting passengers and specialized
cargo vessels hauling freight, line voyages have almost
died out. But with their decline came an increase in
sea trips for pleasure, and in the latter part of the
20th century ocean liners gave way to cruise ships as
the predominant form of large passenger ship, with the
main area of activity changing from the North Atlantic
Ocean to the Caribbean Sea.
Although some ships have characteristics of both types,
the design priorities of the two forms are different:
ocean liners value speed and traditional luxury while
cruise ships value amenities (swimming pools, theaters,
ball rooms, casinos, sports facilities, etc.) rather
than speed. These priorities produce different designs.
In addition, ocean liners typically were built to cross
the Atlantic Ocean between Europe and the United States
or travel even further to South America or Asia while
cruise ships typically serve shorter routes with more
stops along coastlines or among various islands.
For a long time cruise ships were smaller than the old
ocean liners had been, but in the 1980s this changed
when Knut Kloster, the director of Norwegian Caribbean
Lines, bought one of the biggest surviving liners, the
SS France, and transformed her into a huge cruise ship,
which he renamed the SS Norway. Her success demonstrated
that there was a market for large cruise ships. Successive
classes of ever-larger ships were ordered, until the
Cunard liner Queen Elizabeth was finally dethroned from
her 56-year reign as the largest passenger ship ever
built (a dethronement that led to numerous further dethronements
from the same position).
Both the RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2) (1969) and her
successor as Cunard's flagship RMS Queen Mary 2 (QM2),
which entered service in 2004, are of hybrid construction.
Like transatlantic ocean liners, they are fast ships
and strongly built to withstand the rigors of the North
Atlantic in line voyage service,but both ships are also
designed to operate as cruise ships, with the amenities
expected in that trade. QM2 superseded the of the Seas]]
of the Royal Caribbean line as the largest passenger
ship ever built, and in turn was surpassed by Royal
Caribbean's cruise ship however QM2 still hold the record
for the 'LARGEST OCEAN LINER' built Freedom of the Seas.
The latter ship, and her sisters, were superseded by
ships of the Oasis Class delivered in November 2009.
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