Posted on 11/20/2006 4:14:08 PM PST by Lorianne
Sunken treasure with a distinctly fishy flavor has been recovered from a huge Roman shipwreck in the Mediterranean.
The 2,000-year-old vessel, discovered off the Spanish coast, was described by marine archaeologists last week as "a jewel of the Old World."
However, it wasn't gold or silver that the ship was carrying but hundreds of jars of a foul-smelling fish sauce.
The ancient delicacy, known as garum, was usually made from fermented fish guts and blood. Wealthy Romans, experts say, couldn't get enough of the stuff.
The sailing ship, dating from the first century A.D. lies about 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) off Alicante in southeast Spain, where it was first located by divers in 2000 (See Spain map).
The vessel was about 100 feet (30 meters) long and held up to 400 tons of cargo, making it one of the largest Roman shipwrecks ever found, archaeologists said at a conference near the Spanish city of Valencia earlier this month.
Carlos de Juan, who co-led the undersea excavation team, says the ship contains more than 1,200 well-preserved two-handled clay jars called amphoras.
Ceramic-and-mortar seals on the garum jars were corroded by seawater or removed by the occasional curious octopus, the archaeologists report, but traces of the fish sauce remain inside.
"We knew [the shipwreck] was an important find but had no real idea until now," de Juan, who works for the government of Valencia Province, told the Associated Press.
Caught in a Storm
The team said the ship probably sank in a storm while sailing to Rome from the Spanish port of Cadiz, offering important clues about ancient trade routes.
The wooden vessel, which was preserved in mud on the seabed, is dated to about A.D. 50, around the time of the Roman emperors Claudius and Nero.
Such ships usually sank far out to sea where they are almost impossible to locate, de Juan said.
The find is also important because of the excellent condition of its cargo, according to Xavier Nieto Prieto, director of Spain's Submarine Archaeology Center of Catalonia.
"For archaeologists, a sunken ship is a historic document that tells us about ancient history and how its economy worked," he said.
The wreck, which lies in 80 feet (25 meters) of water, attracted pirate scuba divers after news of its discovery first spread, forcing authorities to build a metal cage around it.
Around 70 amphoras were reportedly taken.
Such thefts are often a problem, says Roman amphora expert Elizabeth Lyding Will, of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Amphoras are worth about a thousand U.S. dollars each, Will says.
"People put them on top of walls and have them in their houses as decoration," she added.
What Is Garum?
Will says the clay jars are perhaps the most commonly found cargo in Roman shipwrecks.
"They were enormously useful for trade," she said. "You can tell from the shape whether they were for wine, olive oil, or garum."
She says other sauces were stored in amphoras, including one made from tuna hearts, but that garum was the most common type.
The fish sauce was first made in Cosa, Italy, before Spain took over the main export trade, producing a much sought-after recipe using mackerel guts.
Pliny the Elder, the first-century Roman scholar, wrote of this sauce: "Scarcely any other liquid except unguents [healing ointments] has come to be more highly valued, bringing fame even to the nations that make it."
Will said, "The Romans liked the Spanish sauce best," adding that there was a lot of trade between Spain and Italy during the period the shipwreck dates from.
Garum figured in many Roman recipes, Will adds.
"Garum was a highly prized condiment and very nutritious, too, but made out of internal [fish] organs," she said. "I'm told it was extremely smelly, but the Romans just loved it."
Maybe they put it on their Ceasar salads.
nuoc mam - the Vietnamese version
ping
Also, Worcestershire sauce is another kind of condiment that you can enjoy as long as you don't ask too closely about its ingredient list. (Among others, anchovies pickled for years in open-air tanks.)
I think this kind of sauce is giving you a taste of what's left over after the really foul sulfur-containing byproducts of decay (like putrecine and cadaverine) finally break down.
-ccm
Can't be any worst then that awful fish sauce Vietnamese make.
Blechhh! Fish guts and blood: What the ancients had for supper.
That's the first thing I thought of...
Really? Where are burritos and tacos from?
Had it about a year ago. Not as bad as I thought it would be.
2000 year old fish sauce?? Homer Simpson wouldn't eat that!
Mmmm, fish paste!
I love the stuff personally, guess that comes with having parents that "went native" in VN, where they met. Yeah I grew up eating fried rice with a duck egg on top for breakfast every morning.
Gak. No wonder the empire fell.
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