Wrecks & shipfinds of the Mediterranean
Medieval and later
If modern shipping seems impressing, keep in mind that the
once so huge shipping volume of the Roman Empire was not
exceeded until maybe the 17th century AD.
- Tantura Lagoon "shipwreck
A" and others, Israel. Investigated by Shelley Wachsmann since 1994.
Wreck A is dated
to 5th-6th century AD. The place is a natural harbour, where several
wrecks have been found
.
- The Church
wreck (Marzamemi II). Merchant ship found on 9 m depth off
Marzamemi, Sicily. Dated to
early 6th century AD. Investigated 1960-67 by Gerhard Kapitän and others. Among the the cargo
were pre-fabricated marble parts intended for a church, including an altar and a pulpit.
Possibly this transport was going from Constantinople to Italy. Ref G.F.
Bass: A History of Seafaring. Link.
- Pantano
Longarini wreck, Sicily. Large c 30 m long trading ship embedded on land in the
beach, dated to 6th c AD or perhaps earlier. Discovered in the 1960s, damaged by a bulldozer,
but finally investigated by Peter Throckmorton and Gerhard Kapitän. The ship had a flat
transom stern. Ref Archaeology vol 21 no 3 1968 and G.F. Bass: A History of
Seafaring.
- Yassi
Ada Byzantine ship, Bodrum (Helicarnassos), Turkey. Appr 625 AD, ca 30 m long, carried
11 anchors and was loaded with ca 800 amphoras. Investigated by G. F. Bass, INA, in 1961-64.
During the excavation, an ingenious "phone booth" was placed on 37 m depth, with
voice contact to the surface. Partially reconstructed in the Bodrum
Museum. Ref National Geographic May 1960, July 1963 & Sept 1968. Link.
- Serçe Limani wreck,
Turkey. 15 m long merchant ship, dated to ca 1024 AD. Discovered in 1973 by G. F. Bass,
INA. The lower part of the hull was built with the shell-first method and the upper part with
the frame-first (skeleton) method. The ship had two masts and carried
8 anchors. Loaded with glass, Byzantine amphoras, as well as gaming
pieces for chess and backgammon. Ref National Geographic, June 1978 and IJNA 7.2
1978 & 11.1.1982. Link
.
- Les Sorres X. Ship found at the coast of Catalonia,
Spain. Dated to 1350-1400 AD.
- Lake Garda galley. War galley built in 1439, sunk in 1509. Found by Enrico Scandurra
well preserved in Lago di Garda on 32 m depth. Described in Antiquity, vol 40, 1966.
- Lomellina.
Genovese ship sunk in 1516, loaded with artillery. Discovered in 1979
on 20 m depth off
Villefranche-sur-mer, France.
Excavated by Max Guérout 1982-90. Lower parts of the hull were
preserved in the bottom sand, together with the cargo. Investigated
further in 2002. A special exhibition was displayed during 2002 at
the Musée d'archéologie d'Antibes, France. Ref B. M. Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime
Archaeology.
- Yassi Ada Ottoman ship, Bodrum (Helicarnassos), Turkey. Probable warship from late
16th century, ca 22 m long. Investigated by the INA in 1967, '69 and '82-'83. Ref Archaeology
vol 21 no 3 1968, and B. M. Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology.

- L'Orient.
Built in 1791, 63 m long. French 120 gun warship that exploded and sank at the battle
of Aboukir in 1798 off Alexandria, Egypt. The scattered remains were discovered by Jacques
Dumas in 1983 and investigated 1996-98. The 14 m long rudder braced in bronze has been
recovered. Illustration by Axel
Nelson. Ref B. M. Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology. Link.
- Mentor. This wrecked brig probably has little significance, except for its role in
land archaeology. In 1802 Thomas Bruce, Earl of Elgin, removed the frieze
of Pheidias from Parthenon in Athens. That would today be considered looting. On its way to
London, the ship Mentor sank off Kythera Island (punishment from the
gods?). Eventually the frieze was
salvaged, and is now in the British Museum.
- AE2. Australian submarine scuttled
in 1915 at Gallipoli, Turkey. Discovered in 1996.
- Britannic. British Passenger ship built in 1914, belonging to the White Star Line,
sister ship to Titanic and Olympic. Serving as hospital ship, sunk in 1916
off the island Kea, Greece. The well preserved wreck was located, using side scan sonar, in
1976 by Jacques-Yves Cousteau on 115 m depth, who filmed there and dived using trimix. It is
still a mystery whether she was sunk by a German mine or torpedo. Also whether the sinking was
intentional or accidental. 1996
expedition. 1997 expedition. 1997
expedition. Swedish 1997 article.
1998 expedition. 1999
expedition.
- Le Souffleur. French submarine built in 1927. Sunk off Lebanon in
1941.
- German transport ship, Tunisia. Unidentified remains of German ship that exploded and
sank on 18 m depth, possibly in 1942. There is not much to see except for scattered hull
fragments and parts of a truck/lorry from the cargo. However, this is one of the few wrecks
available for recreational diving in Tunisia. Diving is operated by the Centre Plongée in Port
Kantaoui near Sousse. When I was there in 1999 a dive was about USD 25 including all gear.
- Zenobia. Swedish
cargo ship loaded with new trucks, sunk off Cyprus in 1980. No archaeological significance but
popular among scuba divers.
Further reading
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