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In the Blekinge archipelago, outside Ronneby, ten metres below the surface, lies the wreck of Gribshunden, flagship of the Kalmar Union’s King John (Danish: Kong Hans). It has lain there since 1495, when it sank after catching fire as the king was travelling to meet Sten Sture the Elder in Kalmar. She lay undisturbed on the bottom of the Baltic Sea for almost five centuries, before being discovered by recreational divers in 1970.
Gribshunden was a unique ship – a large royal ship from the late Middle Ages and a representative of the large new vessels which, contributed to early modern societal change.
Thanks to the brackish water of the Baltic Sea, she retains this uniqueness as a wreck, as she is the best-preserved shipwreck of her time and the only one of this type. The ship type is similar to the one Christopher Columbus sailed to America with, and none of those ships remain.
The report is compiled by Professor Johan Rönnby from MARIS, the research institute for marine archaeology at Södertörn University. He has held scientific responsibility for surveys of the wreck off Stora Ekön since 2013.
In the autumn of 2019, working with Blekinge Museum, Lund University and Southampton University, among others, Södertörn University conducted a more extensive excavation of the ship. The researchers are now releasing a report that describes the new finds and discoveries made during this excavation.
Read the English summery in the report, external link, (pdf).