Majesty of the Seas
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Majesty of the Seas anchored off Coco Cay in 2009
{{Infobox ship career |
Hide header = | Ship country = Bahamas | Ship flag = | Ship name = Majesty of the Seas | Ship namesake = | Ship owner = | Ship operator = | Ship registry = 1992–2005: Oslo, Norway 2005–present: Nassau, Bahamas |
Ship homeport = Port Everglades, Florida | Ship ordered = | Ship builder = Chantiers de l'Atlantique (St. Nazaire, France) | Ship original cost = | Ship yard number = | Ship way number = | Ship laid down = | Ship launched = 21 September 1991 | Ship completed = 26 April 1992 | Ship christened = Queen Sonja of Norway | Ship acquired = | Ship maiden voyage = 4 April 1992 | Ship in service = 1992 | Ship refit = 12 January 2007 | Ship out of service = 2020 | Ship identification = *Call sign: C6FZ8 | Ship status = Sold to ScrapCite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).
DescriptionThe ship has a casino and 11 passenger elevators, two of which are glass-walled, various bars, two swimming pools, four hot tubs, a basketball court, and a rock climbing wall. The ship holds 2,350 guests at double occupancy and a maximum of 2,767 guests.[1] Service historyOn 12 January 2007, Majesty of the Seas entered a 4-week dry-dock period where she underwent a multimillion-dollar refurbishment of the pool decks, all public areas, restaurants, shops, centrum and cabins. Plans to transfer Majesty of the Seas to Pullmantur in 2016 had been announced on 21 November 2014, however in July 2015, Royal Caribbean reversed those plans, instead stating that Majesty of the Seas would stay with Royal Caribbean International.[2] Majesty of the Seas entered dry-dock after her 29 April 2016 cruise to receive several upgrades, a children's water play area, a poolside movie screen, and modifications to the casino.[3][4] Majesty of the Seas entered another dry-dock on 24 January 2018. The dry-dock was completed on 4 February 2018. From 11 July 2019, Majesty of the Seas offered guests 4 and 5-night Caribbean getaways sailing from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Along with Empress of the Seas, it was scheduled to sail to Cuba until 2020, but as the US Government applied travel restrictions to the Caribbean island, Royal Caribbean worked to secure alternative itineraries. For the upcoming cruises beginning in January 2020, it would sail year-round voyages with New Orleans as its homeport offering seven-night voyages to the Caribbean including Key West, Nassau, Grand Bahama, and Coco Cay. Majesty completed her final passenger cruise from New Orleans on March 14, 2020 before entering a warm layup period during the cruise shutdown resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and ultimately leaving the fleet in December 2020. COVID-19 pandemicDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, the CDC reported, as early as 22 April 2020, that at least one person who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 was symptomatic while on board.[5] As of 14 March 2020 the ship's cruising operations were suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[6] Scale modelA 1⁄8th scale model of Majesty of the Seas was built in Morsbach, by François Zanella. The model ship was launched in 2005 and performs river cruises in and around Paris, France. References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Majesty of the Seas (ship, 1992). |