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Bronze Age Shipwreck

THE ULUBURUN SHIPWRECK

(photo above: Copper bar from the shipwreck at Uluburun with typical bronze age-shape, photo by Martin Bahmann, Wikimedia Commons)

Cargo as it was scattered over the seabed; Uluburun shipwreck, St. Peter's castle, Bodrum, Turkey, photo © JoJan / Wikimedia Common

Sometimes disaster brings the best rewards. So it is with the Uluburun Bronze Age shipwreck off the coast of southern Turkey. While I’m sure the sailors who went down with the ship sometime around 1300 B.C.E. viewed the sinking of this ship as a complete loss, scholars and history enthusiasts gained immensely. For a writer of fiction set in the Bronze Age world, this ancient ship is a treasure trove. You would think an underwater archaeological dig would be less productive than a land based dig. You would think waterlogged artifacts would have less to offer, would have mostly rotted or washed away. You would be wrong.

From exquisite treasures such as a gold pectoral medallion representing a falcon with outstretched wings holding cobras in each of its claws to insights about trade routes and widespread interaction between far-flung peoples, this silent ship has a lot to say.

image Egyptian jewelry at Bodrum Museum © JoJan / Wikimedia Commons

Until the 1960’s no one tried to tangle out the information contained in underwater sites. Treasure seekers might raid sunken ships, but universities didn’t view them as rich sources of information. For Aegean studies, the Cape Gelidonya shipwreck excavated by George Blass (who had to learn to dive in 1960 as his first step) changed all that. By the time the Uluburun shipwreck was excavated from 1984-1994, a great deal had been learned and far more precise techniques mastered. Both of these sites receive occasional updates as new approaches to dating, retrieving and preserving are developed.

So what did we learn from Uluburun?

Some things you’d expect. Like ship building methods and size of the ships used in sea trade during the Bronze Age (which we’d otherwise have no way of knowing). Actually, very little of the hull survives and this is one of the less productive areas of information revealed by the site, but what we did learn is this:

Photo of reconstructed Bronze Age Ship from Uluburun Shipwreck ©Martin Bahmann / Wikimedia Commons

The ship of about 15 meters length and a beam of 5 meters could carry at least 20 tons of cargo. The hull was made of Lebanese cedar and the planks were fastened together with oak pegs using mortise-and-tenon joints, a technique that probably originated on the shores of the Levantine, gradually spread westward, and was still used much later in Graeco-Roman ships. The ship had a rudimentary ‘proto-keel’, the earliest documented by archaeology.

But way more impressive is the cargo and what it tells us:

The sea floor gave back to us “the largest and richest assemblage of Bronze Age trade goods and raw materials ever found” (Cemal Pulak, “Uluburun Shipwreck” fr. The Oxford Handbook of The Bronze Age Aegean).

The castle of Bodrum in Turkey, south-eastern aspect photo ©Sir Gawain / Wikimedia Commons
This amazing assemblage, by the way, can be seen in one of my favorite museums in Turkey. A gorgeously displayed version of the ship and its contents are housed in Bodrum Castle, built in the early 1400’s A.D. Both the building and the Museum of Underwater Archaeology it houses are worth the trip (Turkish gulet shipand you can take a gulet cruise for a week or so from Bodrum and discover total laziness… Gulets are large wooden ships not all that different from the one in the museum except for modern engines—but I digress.)

There’s way too much about this ship to cover in this post, but I’ll describe some details I found particularly interesting.

We know who some of the people on board were—which seems startling to me, especially as no bodies are involved. The crew was Canaanite (fr. the area now very roughly modern Israel), made up of 4 merchants and an unknown number of sailors. The merchants each had sets of weights using Near Eastern standards that help us identify their place of origin, along with other personal items found in places that indicate crew. The chief merchant, probably the captain, had a Canaanite sword, as well as an extra, fancy set of bronze weights shaped like animals.

But we also know the crew was accompanied by two elite status Mycenaean Greeks, who probably acted on behalf of the king who had ordered the precious goods being carried on the ship. Their presence, indicated by pairs of Mycenaean swords, seals, and other personal items, add to evidence that the ship’s destination was mainland Greece. The cost and risk of trade meant most trade occurred at the palace level rather than small private endeavors, often “under the guise of ‘royal gift exchange’” (Pulak). The royal correspondence of the ancient Aegean is full of references to such “gifts” on a massive scale that clearly raises it to a neatly practical form of mercantile business while sealing diplomatic ties. Such letters go back and forth between Egypt, the Hittite kings, Mycenaeans, Babylonians, and other Eastern kings.

image Map of Mediterranean Sea / Wikimedia Commons

Ships hugged the shore as they sailed and surveys of Bronze Age wrecks have gradually shown us the route from the Levantine harbor (or possibly Cyprus) where this ship seems to have started to the Mycenaean heartland. Uncarved elephant and hippopotamus ivory also found on board, from perhaps Syria or Africa, and African ebony show how widespread the interconnectedness of the ancient world was. I think we still suffer from a false sense of “Western Civilization” superiority, Keats-like, born of our celebration of Athens and all the other laudable Greek accomplishments that we’ve worshipped since the Renaissance. But the reality is far more complicated and fascinating. Both the material cultures and the religious/literary traditions moved back and forth, influencing and counter-influencing over generations, although the most distinct movement is from the East leaving its imprint on the West.

Piles of copper, tin and glass ingots, amphorae of wine and oil, Cypriot pottery in the shapes of lamps, bowls, jugs, and wine cups formed the bulk of the cargo. Smaller, more refined objects included glass and faience beads, sliver bracelets, duck-shaped ivory containers, and ostrich eggshell vases. We owe quite a debt of gratitude to the divers who put in thousands of hours of time at dangerous depths to bring us this vivid window into the 14th century B.C.E. world of the Aegean.

Sources
Cline, Eric. The Oxford Handbook of The Bronze Age Aegean, 2010, Oxford University Press, Ch. 59 “Cape Gelidonya Shipwreck,” George Bass, pp. 797-803 and Ch. 64 “Uluburun Shipwreck,” Cemal Pulak, pp. 862-876.
Bass, George. “A Bronze Age Shipwreck at Ulu Burun: 1984 Campaign,” American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 90, No. 3 (July, 1986), pp. 269-296, Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/505687

21 thoughts on “Bronze Age Shipwreck”

  1. Thanks for this fascinating post, Judith. Having just visited for the second time, the Titanic artifacts exhibit, I can appreciate the details from such exhibits a writer of historical fiction can observe and employ. In one of my parallel lives I’m sure I am a maritime archaelogist, diving wreck sites… Thanks for rescuing Briseis from relative obscurity, and best wishes for your historical novel, Hand of Fire.

  2. Thanks, Linda. I’m not sure how much diving I could do, but I’d love to pour over the finds once brought to the surface!
    I loved your post about women hiding out as men to work on board the ships. Full of interesting details and humor. Yeah! I encourage blog hoppers to hop on over to Linda’s post (see the list at the opening of my post).

  3. It would be so exciting to make an underwater discovery like this. Even the Great Lakes have hundreds of shipwrecks.Fascinating post!

  4. Informative post . I love the Archeolgical side of things, especially pre-history. This wreck tells us so much of trade routes in that era, often forgotten in the morass of old testement.

    1. It’s a fabulous museum, Anna. A favorite throughout my family. I still love the much larger museum of Anatolian Culture in Ankara the very best, but there are some smaller good museums throughout Turkey. I’m hoping to visit some others in the future. There’s so much active archaeology going on in Turkey that new museums and increases to collections are happening.

  5. Great post, Judith. I savored every word! My husband and I plan to look for sunken treasure when he retires, although we never expect to find anything remotely as important as this. Just exploring the skeleton of a ship would be enough for me. Hand of Fire sounds remarkable, as well.

  6. Thanks, Ginger. The archaeologists interview the sponge divers off the coast of Turkey to find the shipwrecks. They show them photos of things as they would look covered in sea crustyness–the various items never look impressive as they are found after all that time and you’d never notice them unless some inquiring archaeologist kept bugging you. Seems to have worked in a few magnificent cases.

  7. Hey! This post could not be written any better! Reading through this post reminds me
    of my old room mate! He always kept chatting about this.
    I will forward this post to him. Pretty sure he will have a good read.
    Thank you for sharing!

  8. Pingback: J.M. Aucoin: Gritty Swashbuckling Adventure » Nautical Blog Hop: Black Men & the Black Flag

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