Six ships from the Middle Ages have been uncovered in a series of excavations in central Oslo, providing researchers with new knowledge on Norwegian maritime history.
Credit: Lars Dønvold-Myhre/NRK |
“In Norway, this is completely unique. There is no doubt about that”, project manager and archaeologist Elling Utvik Wammer of the Norwegian Maritime Museum told the daily newspaper Aftenposten describing the spate of findings “archaeological adventure”.
Credit: Lars Dønvold-Myhre/NRK |
According to Wammer, this is most likely a cargo ship, as lumber was 16th-century Norway's main export. Fellow archaeologist Marja-Liisa Grue assumed that it could have also been used to ship stones to nearby Akershus Fortress, one of Oslo's main sights.
Credit: Lars Dønvold-Myhre/NRK |
Since the start of massive urban development in Bjørvika, a total of 40 shipwrecks have been found. According to Wammer, the findings dating back from the Middle Ages and early modern times are “unique in European context”.
Eventually, some of the shipwrecks will be exhibited at the Norwegian Maritime Museum and 3D models of how the ships looked will also be made.
During the excavations, a number of discoveries were made, including flutes and other instruments, golden rings, a medieval seal and an ink-well of bone decorated with a small star-shaped flower.
Since the 2000s, Bjørvika has undergone vigorous re-development, being transformed from a container port to Oslo's new cultural and urban centre. Up to 5,000 homes and commercial buildings with room for 20,000 employees will be built.
Source: Sputnik News [July 17, 2019]
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