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An Extraordinary 500-Year-Old Swedish Royal Shipwreck In the frigid Baltic Sea Is Rewriting the History
Smithsonian magazine ^ | Nov 2021 | By Jo Marchant

Posted on 03/09/2022 2:17:17 AM PST by dennisw

Shipwrecks from this period are exceedingly rare. Unless a ship is buried quickly by sediment, the wood is eaten away over the centuries by shipworm, actually a type of saltwater clam. But these organisms don’t survive in the fresher waters of the Baltic, and archaeologists believe that much of Hans’ vessel and its contents are preserved. That promises them an unprecedented look at the life of a medieval king who was said to travel with an abundance of royal possessions, not only food and clothing but weapons, tools, textiles, documents and precious treasures. More than that, the relic provides a unique opportunity to examine a state-of-the-art warship from a little-understood period, when a revolution in shipbuilding and naval warfare was reshaping geopolitics and transforming civilization. What Gribshunden represents, researchers think, is nothing less than the end of the Middle Ages and the birth of the modern world.

At the edge of the raft, Brendan Foley, an archaeologist from Lund University in Sweden, and his chief safety officer, Phil Short, are getting ready to dive. Despite the springtime sun, a cold wind blows. Because the water temperature is below 50 degrees, the divers are wearing drysuits and heated underwear that will allow them to work for two hours or more. After extensive planning and a long pandemic delay, Foley is visibly eager to enter the water. “I’ve been waiting for this moment for two years,” he says. He steps off the deck with a splash and makes an OK sign before disappearing from view.

The story of Gribshunden is preserved in several “Chronicles,” narrative histories written in northern Europe in the 16th century, and in an eyewitness account by a young nobleman who survived the disaster. The accounts describe how King Hans, who reigned over Denmark and Norway from 1481 to 1513, sailed east from Copenhagen in the summer of 1495 toward Kalmar, Sweden, to attend a political summit. Europe was then emerging from the Middle Ages into the Renaissance. Dukes and kings ruled from giant castles, and every nobleman’s wardrobe included a suit of armor. In Italy, Leonardo da Vinci was starting work on The Last Supper. In Poland, Nicolaus Copernicus was beginning his studies in astronomy.

Across the Baltic Sea, Denmark, Norway and Sweden had been ruled together under an agreement called the Kalmar Union for close to 100 years, but Sweden had broken away, and rebels there, led by a nobleman named Sten Sture, sought independence. Hans was on a mission to quell the dissent and revive the union by becoming king of Sweden, too. According to the accounts, Hans took a suitably regal fleet of 18 ships, led by Gribshunden, which carried his courtiers, noblemen, soldiers, even a royal astronomer. (excerpt)


TOPICS: Education; History
KEYWORDS: ancientnavigation; godsgravesglyphs; gribshunden; navigation
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To: Tallguy

I think it is a great article myself! I have the dead trees version. With slightly more and better photos of the retrieved sunken treasures.


21 posted on 03/09/2022 1:48:13 PM PST by dennisw
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To: texas booster

Thanks. I had no idea. So interesting!


22 posted on 03/09/2022 1:49:18 PM PST by dennisw
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To: dennisw
Longitude by Dava Sobel

I picked up the book at a Half Price Bookstore years ago. She tells the story of John Harrison, a British clock maker who solved the problem with his son.

I really do like the book, but she is one of the NPR crowd and it shines through the pages. She got an enviable book deal and a TV show out of it.

It is a good book - just not a great one.

But the subject matter is still fascinating.

John Harrison's H1 clock from 1735 still works today.

Redfern Animations of Harrison's H1, H2, H3 and H4 Clocks

23 posted on 03/09/2022 2:12:00 PM PST by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: texas booster

More on your Dava Sobel, who I never heard of—— Until Today

https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/sobel-dava-1947#:~:text=SOBEL%2C%20Dava%201947-%20PERSONAL%3A%20Born%20June%2015%2C%201947%2C,of%20New%20York%20%E2%80%94Binghamton%2C%20Bx.H.S.%20of%20Science%2C%201969.


24 posted on 03/09/2022 2:17:56 PM PST by dennisw
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