After searching for over a decade, a team of divers have discovered the long-lost wreck of the Printz Friedrich, the Danish warship that sank in the Kattegat over 200 years ago.
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Lead musket balls on the sea bed [Kim Schmidt/Undervandsgruppen] |
The team of divers, led by Kim Schmidt, had searched over 104 square km of seabed, making more than 200 dives in vain in difficult conditions before locating the wreck.
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Lead musket balls from the wreck, after restoration [Kim Schmidt/Undervandsgruppen] |
The diving team found a lot of items in the wreckage that could provide insight into the historic ship, such as its origin. Aside from musket balls and a lead plate with a royal crown stamp, the wreck also yielded rapier butts made from brass.
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A model of the warship Printz Friedrich [Credit: Karl Ingwer Malcha/TV2] |
“It’s something that was kept quiet within the ranks of the admiralty, so countries like England – which the Danes had a strained relationship with – wouldn’t catch wind of it.”
Schmidt hopes to acquire enough funds to make a trial excavation of the ship on the seafloor.
Amazingly, given the times, only about eight sailors lost their lives in the sinking thanks to considerable rescue efforts using boats from land and Printz Friedrich’s own lifeboats.
Source: The Copenhagen Post [November 13, 2018]
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