Imagine, if you will, a long narrow basin, an arm reaching out from the great Baltic Sea. This is the Bay of Mecklenburg. It stretches between Germany and the Danish islands.
The Bay of Mecklenburg is a place of history. It is a place of natural wonder. The Bay of Mecklenburg connects the Bay of Wismar and the Bay of Lübeck to the Bay of Kiel. You will find notable ports here such as Lübeck, Rostock, and Wismar.
But there is more to the Bay of Mecklenburg than meets the eye.
In 2024, a remarkable discovery was made. Divers found a 971-meter-long wall on the seabed. It lies 21 meters below the surface, about 10 kilometers off the coast. The discoverers named it the “Blinkerwall.” The wall stands about 1 meter high. Its direction shifts at a series of larger boulders. The stones weigh over 142 tons.
Scientists believe this is Europe’s oldest megastructure. It is around 10,000 years old. Hunter-gatherers may have used it to chase herds of reindeer. The wall was built on land after the last ice age. At that time, much of the southern Baltic was dry. As the Baltic Shield rose, the southern Baltic sank. The sea flooded the area. This preserved Stone Age artifacts.
Consider the implications. People lived here long ago. They built structures that now lie beneath the waves. The Bay of Mecklenburg holds secrets of the past.
The Bay of Mecklenburg includes the Bay of Lübeck. The Bay of Lübeck has its own stories. A terrible tragedy occurred here during the final days of World War II. The British bombed ships filled with concentration camp prisoners. More than 7,000 people died in the Bay of Lübeck.
In 1945, the Nazis tried to hide their crimes. They moved prisoners from concentration camps. Thousands were put on ships in the Bay of Lübeck. Among them were the Cap Arcona, the Thielbek, and the Athen. The British mistook these ships for military vessels. They attacked.
The Cap Arcona was a luxury liner. It once sailed between Hamburg and South America. Now it was a floating prison. The Thielbek was a cargo ship. Prisoners were packed into its dirty compartments. The Athen was another cargo ship. It carried prisoners back and forth.
The British attack was devastating. The Cap Arcona and the Thielbek were sunk. Prisoners burned, drowned, or were shot. Only a few survived. The Athen was spared. British ground troops liberated the prisoners on board.
The Bay of Mecklenburg and the Bay of Lübeck are places of beauty. They are also places of sorrow. They remind us of the past. They hold secrets of ancient peoples. They bear witness to the horrors of war. Stand here and remember. Consider the stories beneath the waves. The Bay of Mecklenburg is more than just a body of water. It is a testament to human history.