Nazi Wreck Found Off Poland May Tackle The Golden Room Treasure Puzzle.
Clean jumpers state they have discovered the disaster area of a German World War Two boat which may help tackle a decades-old puzzle, the whereabouts of the Golden Room, a luxurious chamber from a tsarist royal residence in Russia that was plundered by the Nazis.
Designed with golden and gold, the Golden Room was necessary for the Catherine Castle close to St Petersburg, yet was most recently seen in Koenigsberg, at that point a Baltic port city in Germany yet now the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad. It was from Koenigsberg that the Karlsruhe liner set sail in 1945 with heavy freight, before being sunk by Soviet warplanes off the shoreline of Poland.
Jumpers from the Baltictech bunch say they have discovered the disaster area of the Karlsruhe.
"We have been searching for the destruction since a year ago when we understood there could be the most fascinating, unfamiliar storey lying at the lower part of the Baltic Ocean," jumper Tomasz Stachura said in an announcement. "It is flawless. In its holds, we found military vehicles, porcelain and numerous cases with substance still obscure."
The Karlsruhe had been participating in Activity Hannibal, one of the biggest ocean clearings in history which helped more than 1,000,000 German soldiers and regular people from East Prussia get away from the Soviet development towards the finish of World War Two. Documentation from the time proposes the vessel left Koenigsberg in a rush, with a considerable load and 1,083 individuals ready.
"This, assembled, invigorates the human creative mind. Finding the German liner and the cases with substance so far obscure laying on the lower part of the Baltic Ocean might be critical for the entire story," said jumper Tomasz Zwara.