Collection of Cannon Found Off the Coast of England

News October 15, 2013

(Wessex Archaeology for English Heritage)
SHARE:
Cannons Dutch England
(Wessex Archaeology for English Heritage)

NORTHUMBERLAND, ENGLAND—A collection of cannon that was first spotted in the 1970s by divers from the Tyneside 114 British Sub Aqua Club off the coast of northeastern England has been rediscovered by divers from English Heritage. The corroded cannon are thought to have been manufactured in Sweden between 1670 and 1710. Records kept at Bamburgh Castle suggest that they could have been carried by a Dutch ship that was carrying 40 weapons when it struck the Farne Islands and sank in 1704. Underwater archaeologists from English Heritage are conducting the survey to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Protection of Wrecks Act.

  • Features September/October 2013

    Tomb of the Vulture Lord

    A king’s burial reveals a pivotal moment in Maya history

    Read Article
    (© Kenneth Garrett)
  • Letter from Norway September/October 2013

    The Big Melt

    The race to find, and save, ancient artifacts emerging from glaciers and ice patches in a warming world

    Read Article
    Norway melting ice patch
    Courtesy Oppland County Council, Photo: Johan Wildhagen/Palookaville
  • Artifacts September/October 2013

    Roman Writing Tablet

    A tablet bearing a birthday party invite includes the earliest Latin script penned by a woman

    Read Article
    (© The Trustees of the British Museum/Art Resource, NY)
  • Digs & Discoveries September/October 2013

    No Changeups on the Savannah

    Read Article
    (Private Collection/J.T. Vintage/The Bridgeman Art Library, Werner Forman/Art Resource, NY, Pat Benic/Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images)