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SS Testbank

1937 shipsMaritime incidents in August 1940Merchant ships of the United KingdomShip infoboxes without an imageShips built on the River Tyne
Ships sunk by aircraft during the air raid on BariSteamships of the United KingdomUse British English from May 2023World War II merchant ships of the United Kingdom

SS Testbank was a British cargo steamship that was built in England in 1937 and sunk with heavy loss of life in the air raid on Bari in December 1943. She was the first of two Bank Line cargo ships to be called Testbank. The second was a motor ship that was built in 1961, sold and renamed in 1978, and scrapped in 1987.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article SS Testbank (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

SS Testbank
Via Niccolò Piccinni, Bari Murat

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Wikipedia: SS TestbankContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.125277777778 ° E 16.866666666667 °
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Gelateria Piccinni

Via Niccolò Piccinni 131
70122 Bari, Murat
Apulia, Italy
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Bari
Bari

Bari ( BAR-ee, Italian: [ˈbaːri] (listen); Barese: Bare [ˈbæːrə]; Latin: Barium) is the capital city of the Metropolitan City of Bari and of the Apulia region, on the Adriatic Sea, southern Italy. It is the second most important economic centre of mainland Southern Italy after Naples. It is a port and university city, as well as the city of Saint Nicholas. The city itself has a population of 315,284 inhabitants, over 116 square kilometres (45 sq mi), while the urban area has 750,000 inhabitants. The metropolitan area has 1.3 million inhabitants. Bari is made up of four different urban sections. To the north is the closely built old town on the peninsula between two modern harbours, with the Basilica of Saint Nicholas, the Cathedral of San Sabino (1035–1171) and the Hohenstaufen Castle built for Frederick II, which is now also a major nightlife district. To the south is the Murat quarter (erected by Joachim Murat), the modern heart of the city, which is laid out on a rectangular grid-plan with a promenade on the sea and the major shopping district (the via Sparano and via Argiro). Modern residential zones surrounding the centre of Bari were built during the 1960s and 1970s replacing the old suburbs that had developed along roads splaying outwards from gates in the city walls. In addition, the outer suburbs developed rapidly during the 1990s. The city has a redeveloped airport, Karol Wojtyła Airport, with connections to several European cities.