Athens, Aug 02: A 21-meters
long ancient Greek ship, which archaeologists believe sank in a storm
some 800 metres off the Gela coast in Greece while transporting goods
from the Greek colony in Gela back to Greece in around 500 BC, has been
pulled out of the seabed, where it lay for nearly 2500 years.
On Monday coastguards and experts from the Caltanissetta Culture Department
salvaged the vessel using a boat equipped with a crane able to lift loads
of up to 200 tonnes. Around 20 other support craft joined the operation,
sounding their fog horns when the wreck finally emerged from the water.
The 6.5 metres-wide ancient Greek vessel is said to be the biggest of its
kind ever discovered. Earlier, four Greek vessels found off the coasts
of Israel, Cyprus and France were at most 15 metres long.
Interestingly, it took two decades before the ship was finally pulled out
of the waters, though the bow of the ship, along with an astounding array
of amphorae, drinking cups, oil lamps and woven baskets, were brought to
the surface in 2003.
Two scuba divers had first located it by chance in 1988.
It is said to be of particular value for scholars who will be able to delve
into Greek naval construction techniques thanks to the amazing find of
still-intact hemp ropes used to 'sew' together the pine planks in its hull
- a technique described in Homer's Iliad. "Gela's ancient ship is the patrimony
not only of Sicily, but of all humanity," the ansa.nit quoted Sicily's
regional councillor for culture Antonello Antinoro as saying. Antinoro
was present at the coast while the vessel was brought out yesterday.
Sicilian archaeologists have long hoped that the find will convince the
world that Gela played a key role in ancient times as a major trading centre
in the Mediterranean. Local officials hope the vessel will also turn the
city into an attraction for culture lovers. "This moment signals the rebirth
of Gela. The city's real history has emerged after 2500 years, but the
story doesn't end here," said culture department head Rosalba Panvini.
To preserve them, the pieces of the ship will be kept immersed in tanks
full of the protective chemical polyethylene glycol before being transported
to Portsmouth in the UK, where experts at the Mary Rose Archaeological
Services will conserve and reconstruct the vessel. The culture department
says it eventually plans to build a sea museum in Gela with the ship as
the key exhibit.
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