China Daily (Hong Kong)

Precious cargo

Efforts to recover treasure from sunken vessel prove worthwhile

- Contact the writer at wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

In 1987, employees of a British maritime salvage company came to Yangjiang, Guangdong province, under an agreement with the Chinese government.

They came to look for the Rijnsburg, a Dutch merchant ship that sank during a typhoon in 1772 while reportedly carrying a bountiful cargo. It was a ship about which they only knew from historical records.

Whether by accident or design, another shipwreck was found.

The vessel was centuries older, dating back to the early Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279). As a tiny speck of dust in the grand story of the prosperous Maritime Silk Road — the network of ancient trade routes connecting China to the rest of the world — it was not mentioned in any history books.

Archaeolog­ists named it Nanhai One as it was the first major ancient shipwreck to be found in the South China Sea (Nanhai) within Chinese waters. It also launched a long voyage of discovery for Chinese experts in nautical archaeolog­y.

More than 180,000 cultural relics have been recovered from Nanhai One, which is 22.9 meters long, 9.8 meters wide with a hull 2.7 meters deep, the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion announced at a news conference last week.

“It is so far the biggest underwater archaeolog­ical discovery in China,” says Sun Jian, chief technical supervisor of the National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage, the leader of the research program.

According to Sun, the cabin of the ship, which housed 15 separate rooms, has recently been cleaned up.

Because the wreck was typical of the Fujian style at the time, archaeolog­ists believe that the ship and its fully-laden cargo set off from Quanzhou, a city in the province, which was then one of the world’s busiest sea ports.

“Fujian-style ships were widely used in ocean trade during the Southern Song Dynasty,” Sun explains. “They were safer than other ships at countering storms and high waves, and they were able to carry more goods. However, they were slower.”

It is not known where the vessel was heading or whether it was a storm, high waves, or some other

that sealed the fate of Nanhai One, but the ship sank just a few hundred kilometers away from its starting point. We will probably never know the real reason for its demise.

Systematic research of Nanhai One began in 2000. There was much debate about how to move it from its resting place 20 meters below the surface of the water to dry land.

In 2007, archaeolog­ists finally decided to salvage the shipwreck using a pool-type container called the Crystal Palace to move it to the Maritime Silk Road Museum of Guangdong in Yangjiang. Then, in 2014, archaeolog­ists began to “unearth” the wreck, which was still buried in mud and sand.

The plan was awarded China’s highest prize for progress in science and technology, a rare accolade for the archaeolog­ical community.

“If we lifted the wreck directly from the seabed, we would have overlooked some of the cultural relics, which had been scattered around the wreck,” says Jiang Bo, director of the underwater archaeolog­y department at the National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage. “We were fortunate to see so much historical informatio­n remain so well preserved.

“It’s just so perfect,” he says. “For Chinese underwater archaeolog­y, its significan­ce is incomparab­le.”

Treasure below deck

More than 170,000 porcelain articles were found, most of which remained intact after they were excavated. Sun says they provide a panoramic view of exported Chinese ceramics at the time — the peak of the ancient Maritime Silk Road.

“Such grandeur,” he says. “Almost every type of Chinese porcelain that was being traded globally then can be seen, especially from Zhejiang, Fujian and Jiangxi provinces.”

These signature products include blue-and-white porcelain from Jingdezhen, Jiangxi, which was later to become “China’s porcelain capital”; white porcelain from Dehua, Fujian; other ceramic items in a color resembling soy sauce from the Cizao kilns in Fujian; celadon works from the Longquan kilns in Zhejiang, alongside several other varieties. Their shapes vary widely, from domestic objects like bottles, jars, plates and bowls to rouge cases.

Many of the products were made in exotic styles to meet the demands of overseas buyers, Sun adds.

Yet, this treasure trove of ceramics does not overshadow the other findings. More than 130 metric tons of iron were also retrieved from the wreck.

“Coal was in common use by then, which sparked a boom in metallurgy,” Sun says. “Iron was among China’s key exports in internatio­nal trade at that time, but its importance — which was no less crucial than porcelain or silk — was not widely known to the public.”

Hundreds of gold, silver and copper items, lacquer ware, and a range of other artifacts were also salvaged from the wreck. Some of the gold ornaments were produced in the typical style suggesting that they were unaffordab­le to ordinary people.

“They might not have been saleaaccid­ent, ble commoditie­s,” Sun continues. “Merchants and sailors might have bought them in China as gifts or they could have been personal belongings. The owner of this ship must be rich.”

Over 20,000 copper coins and more than 300 kilograms of silver ingots used for currency also went down with the ship.

Bones of livestock — sheep, geese, chickens, pigs and oxen — plant seeds and shells of sea creatures were also found. There is even a jar of salted duck eggs and some pottery that once contained liquor, prompting the archaeolog­ists to wonder what the banquets on board were like.

“We also found some religious items,” he says. “They show how people were in awe of nature when they traveled across the sea.”

Human remains — bones and hair — were also found, which were proven to belong to young, fit males. Cui Yong, deputy director of the Guangdong Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeolog­y, discovered that they were not Chinese after analyzing their DNA.

“It shows that it might have been common practice for foreign sailors to work on Chinese ships, suggesting a sense of openness,” Cui says.

“Nanhai One is a time capsule,” he says. “It is a dense complex of residences. This slice of history offers an abundance of elements that vividly depict people’s daily lives. Interdisci­plinary research and new scientific techniques will help us make more discoverie­s in the future.”

The next step in the research will focus on the vessel’s wooden hull, which should shed light on the world’s shipbuildi­ng history. For example, Nanhai One was equipped with an elevating rudder which can be adjusted according to the depth of water. The keel was believed to be later introduced from China to Europe by Arab mariners.

Bigger picture

According to Sun Qingwei, an archaeolog­y professor at Peking University, China’s underwater archaeolog­y, particular­ly in nautical studies, was almost a blank slate before the discovery of Nanhai One.

“For Chinese archaeolog­y, the ship is like a maritime counterpar­t of the Yinxu Ruins, which needed generation­s of continued effort to uncover,” he says, citing the more than 3,000year-old ruins of the former capital dating back to the Shang Dynasty (c.16th century-11th century BC) in Anyang, Henan province, as a comparison. Archaeolog­ical research there started in 1928, a date that many scientists regard as the birth of modern Chinese archaeolog­y.

“Thanks to the ship, Chinese expertise in underwater archaeolog­y has greatly advanced,” he says.

“Nanhai One is the highlight of 70 years of archaeolog­y in New China,” Sun Qingwei says. “Its significan­ce will also have a greater impact on the Belt and Road Initiative.”

This experience has helped Chinese underwater archaeolog­ical research to seek new horizons abroad as well. In 2018, Jiang led a team to have a cross-border cooperativ­e research program to examine the ruins of al-Serrian port near Mecca, Saudi Arabia. He says some discoverie­s there echo the findings in Nanhai One, such as the identical counterwei­ghts found there, and will offer a more detailed picture of the global maritime trade.

“Before the Age of Discovery (during the 15th century), the Maritime Silk Road had enabled a network of global trade to expand as widely as humans could,” Wang Guangyao, a researcher at the Palace Museum in Beijing, says. “This can be seen in the types of Chinese porcelain found at sites as far away as Africa and the Mediterran­ean coast.

“However, unlike the Age of Discovery that led to colonizati­on, the Maritime Silk Road was a peaceful trade route based purely on cultural exchange,” he says. “A good example of this is how many countries learned how to make Chinese-style porcelain in those years, and their artistic styles also influenced Chinese products.”

He notes that Nanhai One is a microcosm for these exchanges among different civilizati­ons.

“And detailed research of Nanhai One on land shows that the real nautical archaeolog­y is very different to treasure-hunting, which is often done by Western salvage companies,” Wang says.

Sun Jian expects further research to help fill in many more gaps of studies into Chinese history.

“Physical evidence of the prosperous trade routes throughout South China Sea is rare,” he says. “Nanhai One is just one example, and there is a much wider area that needs to be explored.”

China launched its first vessel specifical­ly designed for underwater archaeolog­y in 2014. Since then, archaeolog­ists have been undertakin­g a comprehens­ive survey of ancient shipwreck sites within Chinese waters. In December, the National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage began to construct a research base in Hainan province to support the ongoing studies.

“The first step is to figure out what we have at home,” Sun Jian says. “We have made many new findings, but this doesn’t necessaril­y mean we have to immediatel­y launch archaeolog­ical excavation­s. The work needs to be integrated into a longterm plan.”

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A bird’s-eye view of Nanhai
One, a shipwreck in which more than 180,000 cultural relics have been recovered.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A bird’s-eye view of Nanhai One, a shipwreck in which more than 180,000 cultural relics have been recovered.
 ??  ?? Cultural relics recovered on Nanhai One, such as a porcelain bowl (left) produced in Longquan kiln, Zhejiang province, gold bracelets (center) and a balance with counterwei­ghts (right), show the prosperous trade along the Maritime Silk Road in the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279).
Cultural relics recovered on Nanhai One, such as a porcelain bowl (left) produced in Longquan kiln, Zhejiang province, gold bracelets (center) and a balance with counterwei­ghts (right), show the prosperous trade along the Maritime Silk Road in the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279).
 ??  ?? Top: Archaeolog­ists work in the cabin of Nanhai One, which is now at the Maritime Silk Road Museum of Guangdong.
Above: A jar of salted duck eggs found in the wreckage.
Top: Archaeolog­ists work in the cabin of Nanhai One, which is now at the Maritime Silk Road Museum of Guangdong. Above: A jar of salted duck eggs found in the wreckage.
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