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ship of Kerynia and HOW will take it back

hello- the ship of kerynia is a famous ancient ship which is in the occupied area from turkey army of north Cyprus from 1974 - in THALASSA museum ayia napa is the replica = kerynia 2 - for me it is a symbol of freedom and the 1st goal to take ti back - in FREE area of Cyprus = because ..there is... the... think Ayia Napa- A Tourist campaign With pioneer projects with ...Sports/art/culture/history by tFv = https://www.thinkfamilyvacation.com/think-ayia-napa #like #follow #support #offertoWork - this is the replica of famous ship of Kerynia - i BELIEVE with marketing can.. bring back the REAL ship of Kerynia - if i find SUPPORT - people with VISION and to know what is MARKETING.. -[ i try to offer my pioneer ideas and marketing and make VERY famous the THALASSA museum in Ayia napa..] - inform- same and better ideas for ANY other museum.... ================================================================================ by Think Family vacation- the 1st creaTive tourist website =Projects on sports tourism combine the..history of each place .- and..NEW marketing ideas/ART Services =social media = [photo/video]/ Sport services with..think sport court -A pioneer basketball program [ edu/tourist/anti bullying/pro sport guidance] - for ANY age/family act = For ANY place/park/hotel act = https://shoutout.wix.com/so/e4OKI7yGT... #TOURISM #offer #family #hotel #basketball #travel #socialMedia #thinkfamilyvacation #sportsTourism = follow/share/like be partner in tFv socials [ facebook/ instagram/youtube ] = think family vacation =====================================================================

VISIT the photo album of THALASSA museum https://www.thalassa-museum-by-t.thinkfamilyvacation.com/ @thalassaMuseum #Thalassa #museum

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=====================================================================the story of ship of Kerynia The Kyrenia Ship is the wreck of a 4th-century BC ancient Greek merchant ship. It was discovered by Greek-Cypriot diving instructor Andreas Cariolou in November 1965 during a storm.[2][3] Having lost the exact position, Cariolou carried out more than 200 dives until he re-discovered the wreck in 1967 close to Kyrenia in Cyprus. Michael Katzev, a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, directed a scientific excavation from 1967–69. Preservation of the ship's timbers continued during the winter of 1970. Katzev later was a co-founder of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology. The find was extensively covered in a documentary by the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation titled "With Captain, Sailors Three: The Ancient Ship of Kyrenia"]. The ship itself was very well preserved with approximately 75% of its hull in good condition. It found a new home at the Ancient Shipwreck Museum in Kyrenia Castle, where it remains on exhibit.[4]

Career[edit]

The ship sailed in the Mediterranean during the lifetime of Alexander the Great and his successors. She sank in open waters less than a mile from the ancient harbor of Kyrenia. The evidence points to her being taken by rough seas around the year 300 BC, when she was rather old, though piracy is a distinct possibility.[5]

Archaeologists found spear points in the hull.[5] While these could very well be used for the protection of the crew, rubber casts indicate that some were in contact with the lead sheathing covering the ship.[5] This would suggest that the points were stuck inside the hull when it sank - possible evidence of an attack.[5] In typical merchant ships the captain would have a balance, weights, and coinage for measuring and trading goods- all of which were missing.[5] Even more surprising is that over a ton of cargo is absent from the wreckage.[5] This leads researchers to believe that the ship could have been plundered. What opens up this argument further is the presence of an uninscribed curse tablet in the wreckage.[5]In this scenario a pirate would hammer the lead tablet to a part of the boat in hopes that gods of the underworld would drag the ship to the seabed and hold it there to conceal the evidence of the crime. This tablet, along with the missing equipment leads many to believe that piracy played a part in the vessel's sinking.

The ship was in use by merchants for 15–25 years.[5] Knowing that the ship was old, archaeologists could use the repairs on the hull to better understand classical carpentry. A break in the ship's keel had been mended, and the outside of the ship was protected with pitch and lead sheathing to keep the aging timbers water-tight and extend the ship's working life..[6] Closer analysis of the rabbets in the hull's frame suggest that the mast step had been moved up to three, and possibly four times.[6] This movement happens to be in close proximity with a space to collect bilge water.[6][7] Because of this, archaeologists surmise that the movement of the mast step was to make way for a larger bilge bucket, capable of lifting water out and overboard[8] These extreme measures to deal with water infiltration corroborate the frailty of the ship and may havey contributed to its sinking. The hull's near-complete preservation, along with its extensive repairs, demonstrate its long sailing life and adds greatly to our knowledge of ship building in antiquity.

Discovery

The shipwreck of Kyrenia (Keryneia) was discovered in November 1965 by the Kyrenian Greek Cypriot diving instructor and Municipal Councilor Andreas Cariolou while collecting sponges at a sea depth of 33 metres, approximately a nautical mile Northeast of the harbour of Kyrenia on the North coast of the Republic of Cyprus, during a stormy day. With the storm at the surface the anchor of his vessel started to drag on the muddy seabed. Cariolou noticed the cloud of the drag and followed the anchor's slow travel when he suddenly noticed the shipwreck. Happily bewildered he had to quickly recover and follow the drag of his anchor as his vessel was dangerously approaching the rocky coast. Understanding the importance of his finding and the danger of illegal excavations, he remained discreet about it informing only the director of the Department of Antiquities Dr. Vasos Karagiorgis and the President of the Republic of Cyprus. In late 1967, the Department of Antiquities of the Republic of Cyprus, invited a number of Underwater Archaeologists to study the possibilities of excavating at such a particularly difficult and costly sea depth. Amongst them was nautical archaeologist Michael Katzev of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology who was working at the time on a survey of the coast of Cyprus for shipwrecks. In that year, Andreas Cariolou took the team headed by Michael Katzev to the site.

First, a team of scientists from Oxford University (Dr. Edward Hall, Dr. Jeremy Green), using a "proton" magnetometer metal detector and probes, spent a month surveying the site to find metal parts and the approximate position of the entire ship and her cargo over an area measuring approximately 20 metres by 5 metres. During the summers of 1968 and 1969 , Michael Katzev directed the expedition consisting of more than 50 underwater archaeologists, students and technicians employing stereo-photography and other developed techniques to record the position of each object before it was brought to surface. Then the ship's wooden hull which was well preserved in the silt and muddy seabed was "mapped", labeled and carefully lifted in a number of pieces to the surface.

Archaeological evidence

Objects exposed at the Kyrenia Castle Shipwreck Museum

The objects in Kyrenia Castle are the original ones that she carried during her last voyage about 2300 years ago. From them we can learn about the life of the captain and three sailora who manned the ship. More than 400 wine amphoras, mostly made in Rhodes, constitute the main cargo and they indicate that the ship made an important stop at that island, possibly its home port.

Ten distinct amphora shapes on board suggest other ports of call, such as Samos in the north. Another cargo of the ship was perfectly preserved almonds, 9000 in number, that were found in jars and also within the ship's hull. Twenty-nine millstones, laden in three rows over the keel as cargo also served as ballast. At the stone quarry, probably on the island of Kos, masons carved letters of identification on the sides of these stones. All these bits of evidence suggest that the ship sailed southwards along the coast of Anatolia, calling at Samos, Kos and Rhodes before continuing eastwards to her destruction off Cyprus.

The sailors fished during the voyage and this is revealed by more than 300 lead net weights found in the bow. Meals were probably prepared ashore, using large casserole pots and a bronze cauldron. Four wooden spoons, four oil jugs, four salt dishes and four drinking cups recovered in the shipwreck suggest that her crew on her last voyage consisted of four seamen.

The ship's single sail may have been taken down before she sank as the stern cabin contained more than 100 lead rigging rings from a large square sail stowed there. The wooden[hull , built mostly of pine (Pinus brutia), was preserved for a length of almost 14.7 metres by 4.4 metres across. The ship was built using the "shell first" ancient method, the opposite of today's method. Contrary to the contemporary wood boat building method where a complete skeleton of frames of the entire vessel must first be constructed, in this case, the planking from the keel and up was joined together first, using a mortice-and-tenon construction, and then the frames were laid in, secured with an ingenious assembly wood pegs pierced by copper nails passing through both frames and planks.[6] The ship was intended for long service and underwent four major repairs in her life. In the last repair a skin of lead sheathing of 1.5 to 2 millimeters thickness was applied to her body to hopefully keep the old ship comparatively safe from woodworm and probably help watertightness. Carbon 14 dating of the ship's planks gives a date of 389 BC (plus or minus 44 years). Carbon 14 dating of the almonds points to a date of 288 BC (plus or minus 62 years). Hence the ship was very old the day she sank.

Preservation and conservation of the ship's wood began in 1970 and lasted four years until the original timbers were reassembled on permanent scaffolding, to be seen still today on exhibit, along with its cargoes and goods of the sailors in Kyrenia Castle.




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