Seventeenth-Century Ship Identified

User avatar
de officiis
Posts: 2528
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 11:09 am

Seventeenth-Century Ship Identified

Post by de officiis »

Seventeenth-Century Ship Identified
POOLE, ENGLAND—After ten years of research and excavation, a seventeenth-century ship known as the Swash Channel Wreck has been identified as The Fame, an armed Dutch merchant vessel, by a team of scientists from Bournemouth University. BBC News reports that The Fame’s crew may have planned to stop in Poole on its way from Amsterdam to the West Indies when it foundered and broke up during a storm in 1631. Tree-ring dating of the Swash Channel Wreck’s timbers suggests that the wood in the hull came from trees cut down between 1619 and 1639 in the Netherlands or Germany. Historic records indicate that all 45 people on board The Fame, and its master, John Jacobson Botemaker, were rescued, but the ship became a danger to other ships navigating the channel. Its contents and cannon are thought to have been salvaged, though it is also possible that it had been traveling without any cargo. “Everything fits, although you can never be sure,” explained marine archaeologist Dave Parham.
Pretty cool-looking rudder:

Image
Image
User avatar
Martin Hash
Posts: 19118
Joined: Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:02 pm

Re: Seventeenth-Century Ship Identified

Post by Martin Hash »

I listen to a great, short archaeology podcast every week. This particular story hasn't been done yet but if you're into this kind of thing:
Archaeologica
Shamedia, Shamdemic, Shamucation, Shamlection, Shamconomy & Shamate Change
User avatar
de officiis
Posts: 2528
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 11:09 am

Re: Seventeenth-Century Ship Identified

Post by de officiis »

I subscribe to that as well. It's a husband and wife team.
Image