The Stirling Castle, a 70-gun ship lost in the Great Storm of 1703: Archaeological investigations 1979-2009
The Stirling Castle, a 70-gun ship lost in the Great Storm of 1703: Archaeological investigations 1979-2009
This book examines the archaeological investigations undertaken between 1979 and 2009 on the wreck of the Stirling Castle a 70-gun third-rate ship of the line, lost on the Goodwin Sands, Kent during the Great Storm of 1703. Included is a history of the warship, a detailed account of archaeological investigations undertaken and the environmental factors impacting the seabed remains. A review of the ship’s construction draws on records of structure remaining on the seabed and recovered material. The artefact collection is considered by material and type. Specialist analysis has enabled greater understanding of ship fittings, weapons, navigation equipment, medical artefacts, food preparation and consumption, clothing and apparel, and life onboard. The volume demonstrates the value of studying dispersed archives from shipwreck excavations and their potential to add considerably to maritime history and archaeology. In this case the examined archaeological records and artefacts from the Stirling Castle offer a compelling insight into the maritime world of the seventeeth and eighteenth centuries from a range of perspectives.
Maritime Archaeology, Goodwin Sands, Great Storm, shipwreck, Archive
Whitewright, Julian
80f5f9b9-3d0d-46bb-a759-7b59f5993bb2
2020
Whitewright, Julian
80f5f9b9-3d0d-46bb-a759-7b59f5993bb2
Whitewright, Julian
(2020)
The Stirling Castle, a 70-gun ship lost in the Great Storm of 1703: Archaeological investigations 1979-2009
(British Archaeological Reports, British Series, B656),
vol. B656,
BAR Publishing, 264pp.
Abstract
This book examines the archaeological investigations undertaken between 1979 and 2009 on the wreck of the Stirling Castle a 70-gun third-rate ship of the line, lost on the Goodwin Sands, Kent during the Great Storm of 1703. Included is a history of the warship, a detailed account of archaeological investigations undertaken and the environmental factors impacting the seabed remains. A review of the ship’s construction draws on records of structure remaining on the seabed and recovered material. The artefact collection is considered by material and type. Specialist analysis has enabled greater understanding of ship fittings, weapons, navigation equipment, medical artefacts, food preparation and consumption, clothing and apparel, and life onboard. The volume demonstrates the value of studying dispersed archives from shipwreck excavations and their potential to add considerably to maritime history and archaeology. In this case the examined archaeological records and artefacts from the Stirling Castle offer a compelling insight into the maritime world of the seventeeth and eighteenth centuries from a range of perspectives.
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Published date: 2020
Keywords:
Maritime Archaeology, Goodwin Sands, Great Storm, shipwreck, Archive
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Local EPrints ID: 441966
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/441966
PURE UUID: ba0f2a6e-9a7b-4e4e-a710-4ac16945ca77
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2020 16:30
Last modified: 13 Dec 2023 02:37
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