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Gribshunden in perspective: : a castle on the sea

Foley, Brendan LU and Hansson, Martin LU orcid (2024) In Cultural Studies in Maritime and Underwater Archaeology 6. p.165-178
Abstract
The royal Danish-Norwegian flagship Gribshunden, launched in 1485, was among
the earliest northern European warships purpose-built to carry artillery. However, King Hans employed his vessel as far more than a weapons platform. The ship was his ‘floating castle’, fulfilling all the various purposes of a land redoubt. At its loss in 1495 enroute to a political summit in Kalmar, where Hans expected to be crowned king of Sweden, it was his mobile seat of government, an instrument combining hard and soft power functions. Recent excavations of Gribshunden reveal its martial aspects: artillery, small arms (including several crossbows and hand guns) and personal armour. Soft power is reflected more subtly in other artefacts: silver coins;... (More)
The royal Danish-Norwegian flagship Gribshunden, launched in 1485, was among
the earliest northern European warships purpose-built to carry artillery. However, King Hans employed his vessel as far more than a weapons platform. The ship was his ‘floating castle’, fulfilling all the various purposes of a land redoubt. At its loss in 1495 enroute to a political summit in Kalmar, where Hans expected to be crowned king of Sweden, it was his mobile seat of government, an instrument combining hard and soft power functions. Recent excavations of Gribshunden reveal its martial aspects: artillery, small arms (including several crossbows and hand guns) and personal armour. Soft power is reflected more subtly in other artefacts: silver coins; secular artwork depicting flowers, animals and mythical beasts; and prestige provisions,
including copious amounts of exotic imported spices and a large sturgeon. Continuing excavations of the wreck are revealing the structure of the ship itself, while providing insights into the social division of space aboard this royal castle at sea. Combined with archival documents, analyses of all these artefacts deliver deep insight into the people aboard the ship and the late Mediaeval period through which they travelled. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Medieval, shipwreck, Nordic‐Baltic Sea Countries, Denmark-Norway, castles
host publication
Delivering the Deep: : Maritime Archaeology for the 21st Century: Selected Papers From IKUWA 7 - Maritime Archaeology for the 21st Century: Selected Papers From IKUWA 7
series title
Cultural Studies in Maritime and Underwater Archaeology
editor
Ilves, Kristin ; Walker Vadillo, Veronica and Velentza, Katerina
volume
6
pages
14 pages
publisher
British Archaeological Reports (BAR)
ISBN
9781407361482
9781407361475
DOI
10.30861/9781407361475
project
Floating Castles: the Built Environment and Social Signaling in Medieval Scandinavia
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
16999361-a0c8-45e2-83c3-f2e4e380f6d1
date added to LUP
2024-06-26 21:58:17
date last changed
2024-06-28 09:20:17
@inproceedings{16999361-a0c8-45e2-83c3-f2e4e380f6d1,
  abstract     = {{The royal Danish-Norwegian flagship Gribshunden, launched in 1485, was among<br/>the earliest northern European warships purpose-built to carry artillery. However, King Hans employed his vessel as far more than a weapons platform. The ship was his ‘floating castle’, fulfilling all the various purposes of a land redoubt. At its loss in 1495 enroute to a political summit in Kalmar, where Hans expected to be crowned king of Sweden, it was his mobile seat of government, an instrument combining hard and soft power functions. Recent excavations of Gribshunden reveal its martial aspects: artillery, small arms (including several crossbows and hand guns) and personal armour. Soft power is reflected more subtly in other artefacts: silver coins; secular artwork depicting flowers, animals and mythical beasts; and prestige provisions,<br/>including copious amounts of exotic imported spices and a large sturgeon. Continuing excavations of the wreck are revealing the structure of the ship itself, while providing insights into the social division of space aboard this royal castle at sea. Combined with archival documents, analyses of all these artefacts deliver deep insight into the people aboard the ship and the late Mediaeval period through which they travelled.}},
  author       = {{Foley, Brendan and Hansson, Martin}},
  booktitle    = {{Delivering the Deep: : Maritime Archaeology for the 21st Century: Selected Papers From IKUWA 7}},
  editor       = {{Ilves, Kristin and Walker Vadillo, Veronica and Velentza, Katerina}},
  isbn         = {{9781407361482}},
  keywords     = {{Medieval; shipwreck; Nordic‐Baltic Sea Countries; Denmark-Norway; castles}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{165--178}},
  publisher    = {{British Archaeological Reports (BAR)}},
  series       = {{Cultural Studies in Maritime and Underwater Archaeology}},
  title        = {{Gribshunden in perspective: : a castle on the sea}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/189958962/22_10_Gribshunden_in_perspective_a_castle_on_the_sea.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.30861/9781407361475}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}