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Brunswick shipwreck in Simonstown Bay

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Status: 

HeritageAuthority(s): 

Case Type: 

ProposalDescription: 

The Program in Maritime Studies at East Carolina University (ECU) will investigate the Brunswick shipwreck as part of an academic initiative. Faculty and students will map, draw and photograph the shipwreck for archaeological purposes. A small number of discrete wood samples will be collected for historical analysis purposes.

Expanded_Motivation: 

The project will serve a number of teaching and research objectives for bone fide researchers. It will be utilized as a collaborative maritime archaeology endeavour between ECU and IZIKO museums involving students specializing in this discipline. One of the students, Ivor Mollema, will be using this data for his MA thesis research project. Others will receive academic class credit for their participation. The Brunswick shipwreck is an iconic symbol of global British trade and represent a critical era of change in shipbuilding technology. Archaeological and historical investigations have potential to yield data about social, economic and technological trends in European maritime history. We plan to partner with IZIKO to publish this data in professional publications and presentations at local and international conferences.

ApplicationDate: 

Friday, March 7, 2014 - 22:17

CaseID: 

5063

OtherReferences: 

ReferenceList: 

CitationDate Retrieved
Albion, Robert Greenhalgh. Forests and sea power: The timber problem of the Royal Navy, 1652-1862. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1926. Albion, Robert G. "The timber problem of the Royal Navy, 1652–1862." The Mariner's Mirror 38.1 (1952): 4-22 Ashmore, Harriette. Narrative of a Three Month's March in India: And a Residence in the Dooab. R. Hastings, 1841. Atmore, Anthony, and Shula Marks. "The imperial factor in South Africa in the nineteenth century: Towards a reassessment." The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 3.1 (1974): 105-139Knight, R. J. B. "The Introduction of Copper Sheathing into the Royal Navy, 1779–1786." The Mariner's Mirror 59.3 (1973): 299-309. Bennett, Chris. A day by day chronicle of interesting naval incidents in the history of South Africa 1998. South African Maritime Interest, 1998. Dommisse, Boet, and Tony Westby-Nunn. SIMON'S TOWN: an illustrated historical perspective. Westby-Nunn Publishers, 2002. Golovnin, Vasiliĭ Mikhaĭlovich. Detained in Simon's Bay: The Story of the Detention of the Imperial Russian Sloop Diana from April 1808 to May 1809. Friends of the South African Library, 1964. Henshaw, Peter James. "The transfer of Simonstown: Afrikaner nationalism, South African strategic dependence, and British global power." The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 20.3 (1992): 419-444. . Kamwangamalu, Nkonko M. "The social history of English in South Africa." World Englishes 21.1 (2002): 1-8. Lawrie, G. C. "Simonstown Agreement: South Africa, Britain and the Commonwealth, The." S. African LJ 85 (1968): 157. Percival, Robert. An Account of the Cape of Good Hope;: Containing an Historical View of Its Original Settlement by the Dutch, Its Capture by the British in 1795, and the Different Policy Pursued There by the Dutch and British Governments. Also a Sketch of Its Geography, Productions, the Manners and Customs of the Inhabitants, &c., &c. With a View of the Political and Commercial Advantages which Might be Derived from Its Possession by Great Britain. C. and R. Baldwin, of New Bridge-Street., 1804. Rippon, Geoffrey. "South Africa and naval strategy: The importance of South Africa." The Round Table 60.239 (1970): 303-309. Saunders, Christopher. "Liberated Africans in Cape Colony in the first half of the nineteenth century." The International Journal of African Historical Studies 18.2 (1985): 223-239. Tennant, Hercules, and Edgar Michael Jackson. Statutes of the Cape of Good Hope, 1652-1905: Being a Revised Reprint of the Authorised Ed. Issued in 1895. Vol. 2. Cape times limited, government printers, 1906.
Friday, March 7, 2014

Public Comments

Displaying 1 - 1 of 1

Lynn Harris
10 years 2 months ago
East Carolina University

Please note a letter of collaboration from Mr. Jaco Boshoff at IZIKO museum is pending.

 

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