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The martyrs who died for their Catholic faith between the 16th and 18th century will play a starring role in an upcoming documentary to be aired this year on the Eternal Word Television Network, a ...
The 98-foot-long vessel was transporting ceramic jugs, ceramic plates and metal bars when it sank off southeastern France nearly 500 years ago ...
Archaeologists have uncovered what could be a 16th-century merchant vessel’s remains off the coast of southern France, marking the deepest shipwreck ever uncovered in this part of the Mediterranean.
“We Were Here: The Untold History of Black Africans in Renaissance Europe,” a documentary by filmmaker Fred Kudjo Kuwornu, seeks to correct this omission. The film, which screens at UC Santa Barbara’s ...
French officials recently announced the discovery of Camarat 4, the deepest shipwreck ever found in French waters. The site includes 16th-century Italian ceramics with Christian symbols.
How economics solves a 500 year old shipwreck mystery : Planet Money Picture the Pacific Ocean of the 16th century. Spanish Galleons sail the wide open seas, carrying precious cargo like silver ...
University of Glasgow professor Laurence Grove described the picture book as “Instagram for the 16th century,” and that the images came as a total surprise to archivists.
A drone discovered by chance what archaeologists say are the remains of a 16th-century ship more than 1.5 miles underwater off southern France.
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