China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shipwreck find could be laden with stuff of history

- By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESS in Miami

Treasure hunters have apparently found the 500-year-old remains of a naval expedition led by a colonizer who could have changed Florida’s history, making it French-speaking at least for a while.

The big question is if the shipwreck is that of La Trinite, the 32-gun flagship of a fleet led by Jean Ribault, a French navigator who tried to establish a Protestant colony in the southeast United States under orders from King Charles IX.

They probably are, say authoritie­s in Florida, the French government and independen­t archeologi­sts.

And if they in fact are, this is an unparallel­ed find, said John de Bry, director of the Center for Historical Archeology, a not-for-profit organizati­on.

“If it turns out to be La Trinite, it is the most important, historical­ly and archaeolog­ically, the most important shipwreck ever found in North America,” he told AFP.

All indication­s are that the shipwreck found is the real thing.

The artifacts found at the site off Cape Canaveral include three bronze cannons with markings from the reign of King Henri II, who ruled right before Charles IX; and a stone monument with the French coat of arms that was to be used to claim the new territory.

The remains are “consistent with material associated with the lost French Fleet of 1565,” said Meredith Beatrice, director of communicat­ions with the Florida Department of State.

In 1565, Ribault set sail from Fort Caroline, today Jacksonvil­le, to attack his arch-enemy, the Spaniard Pedro Menendez de Aviles, who had been sent to Florida by King Philip of Spain to thwart French plans to set up a colony.

But Ribault got caught in a hurricane, which destroyed La Trinite and three other galleons and ended French dreams of claiming Florida.

Ribault and hundreds of other French Huguenots were massacred by Menendez de Aviles.

“If the French had not been driven south and ships sunk by the hurricane, we would have a totally different story,” said de Bry. “Florida could have been speaking French for a number of years.”

In modern-day Florida, archeologi­sts and historians have been looking for this shipwreck for years.

Two years ago, an expedition from the state-run St. Augustine Lighthouse Archaeolog­ical Maritime Program gave it a shot but found nothing.

Marine archeologi­st Chuck Meide, who led that try, said “this is one of the most important shipwreck discoverie­s we have had in Florida.”

The find was finally made in May of this year by a treasure hunting firm called Global Marine Exploratio­n.

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