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The Mary Rose

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The Mary Rose The Mary rose was once the pride of the British fleet but finished as a object in a museum. But how? Find out in chronological order by clicking now. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Mary Rose


1
The Mary Rose
  • The Mary rose was once the pride of the British
    fleet but finished as a object in a museum. But
    how? Find out in chronological order by clicking
    now.

Or as www.themaryrose.com says The Mary Rose is
the only 16th century warship on display anywhere
in the world. Built between 1509 and 1511, she
was one of the first ships able to fire a
broadside, and was a firm favourite of King Henry
VIII. After a long and successful career, she
sank accidentally during an engagement with the
French fleet in 1545. Her rediscovery and raising
were seminal events in the history of nautical
archaeology.
2
The Mary Rose
  • The Mary Rose was the pride of Henry VIIIs Navy
    and had for years fought successfully in many
    battles. Apparently she was sunk by the French
    but there is other evidence to say that she may
    have simply been mishandled or overloaded and it
    was this that led to her being under the sea.

3
The Salvaging
  • The salvaging of the Mary Rose was only possible
    after it was rediscovered on 1971 and the outline
    of the hull was gradually exposed and surveyed
    (this took seven years) was it possible to dig a
    trench allowing archaeologists to have a look at
    its interior

4
Salvaging
  • The warship was finally raised on October 11th,
    1982 An estimated 60 million television viewers
    worldwide watched her come to the surface in the
    first ever live broadcast from underwater. The
    initial lifting was carried out over a period of
    eight hours to avoid any suction effect. When the
    process of gently detaching the hull from the
    silt was complete, a giant floating crane
    carefully transferred it underwater into a
    purpose-built cradle positioned on the seabed
    nearby.

5
Salvaging
  • Once secured to the cradle the whole package,
    weighing 580 tons, was raised and towed ashore.
    As soon as it broke the surface, the water inside
    the hull was pumped out to reduce the load on the
    structure.

6
Ashore
  • After the ship was raised she was towed into
    Portsmouth naval base. She was wrapped in
    protective foam and polythene and constantly
    sprayed to keep her wet.

She had been found a new home in No.3 Drydock,
(just behind HMS Victory) and preparatory work
began by removing the lifting frame. After that
she had to be lifted up and wheeled onto a
smaller barge, the one she was on was too large
to fit into the dock. She was moved into the dock
on December 8th 1982.
7
Conservation begins
  • Before they could start conserving the Mary Rose
    they had to build somewhere for her to live.
  • Then they kept her wet with a sprinkling system
    that used recycled cold water every five minutes

8
Today
The ship today is being sprayed by a type of wax
which will mean that in twenty years there will
be no need what so ever for water any more. The
techniques used to conserve the iron cannons were
controversial because they were impossible to
undo. There were other ways to try and conserve
the cannons but none were successful

9
Conclusion
My conclusion is that many people put lots of
time and money into what eventually turned out to
be the greatest marine excavation of all time and
that most of all we must thank those who helped
Alex McKee in the early stages of the excavation.
  • After so many years of being denigrated behind my
    back as a mad chaser after wild geese, it was
    with great satisfaction that I saw the message go
    off.
  • The words of Alex McKee when the message
    containing proof of the Mary Rose was sent to
    Portsmouth.

10
End of Theos project
  • And the start of Diegos project on Nineveh

11
Nineveh
  • Time line of Nineveh
  • What is nineveh?
  • Why is it a good and famous archeological place?
  • Archeological things about it.

12
Time Line of Nineveh
  • HISTORY6000 BCE First settlements of
    Nineveh.2nd and 3rd millennia Nineveh is a
    religious centre devoted to among other gods
    Ishtar.9th century Large architectural projects
    start in Nineveh with the initiative of rulers of
    the Assyrian Empire.705 King Sennacherib
    establishes Nineveh as the new capital of the
    Assyrian Empire, at the expense of Dar Sharrukin.
    Large scale construction work is started,
    together with the building of the largest palace
    of its time, which was 42,000 km² large with at
    least 80 rooms.Around 650 Under king
    Ashurbanipal, a new palace is constructed,
    together with a large library.612 The city is
    captured and destroyed by the Babylonians,
    Schytians and Medes. This also marks the end of
    the Assyrian Empire.13th century CE Nineveh
    becomes an important city under Atabeg
    rulers.16the century The last settlements of
    Nineveh are abandoned.1820 Nineveh is mapped by
    the British archaeologist Claudius J.
    Rich.1845-51 The palace of Sennacherib is
    discovered.

13
What is Nineveh?
  • City of the ancient Assyrian Empire, and its
    capital from 705 to 612 BC. Nineveh was situated
    on the east bank of the Tigris near modern Mosul.
    The Khawsar River ran through Nineveh to join the
    Tigris. During its relatively short period of
    being capital, Nineveh was turned into a
    beautiful city of wide boulevards, large squares,
    parks, and gardens. At its largest, Nineveh was
    700 hectares large, walled with 15 gates. The
    walls measured 12 km in circumference. Each gate
    was named after an Assyrian god. Aqueducts and
    canals lead water from sources in the hills 50 km
    away. Most of Nineveh's period of existence is
    mainly prehistoric a 30 metre long shaft dug in
    1931-32 from the top to virgin soil proved that
    only 20 of the debris belonged to the period of
    recorded history.

14
  • Ancient country in the Middle East, with
    centre in modern Iraq along the Tigris river. At
    its height in the 9th century BC, Assyria covered
    areas of also modern eastern Turkey, Syria,
    Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, western Iran, Kuwait,
    and Egypt.
  • SOCIETY AND ECONOMYCentral to the central region
    of Assyria was farming, fed by both the Tigris
    river and water from the Armenian mountains in
    the north and the Zagros mountains the east. With
    the expansion of Assyria more land with other
    economies were including, like mining and
    forestry. It is believed that the civilization
    of Assyria came from the immigration of an
    unknown people into the area around 6000 BC. This
    was followed by Semitic immigration about 3
    millenniums later. Life was located to small
    villages, and there was an intricate system of
    irrigation that fed the agriculture. There were
    few larger cities, and these served as trade and
    craft centres. Assyria had some slaves, but these
    played only a small part of the economy. The
    Assyrians were noted for their high knowledge in
    warfare and organization.
  • ADMINISTRATIONAssyria had a traditional form of
    monarchy, where the king answered only to his
    court. The king's son would normally take over as
    the new ruler at the old king's death. Local
    administration was organized around local rulers
    who paid taxes to the king as well as provide men
    for the army. As Assyria extended its
    territories through military campaigns, local
    rulers were allowed to continue to govern their
    old regions, as long as they fulfilled their
    duties to the Assyrian king. Under Sargon 2,
    Assyria was divided into 70 provinces.
  • CULTUREAmong the finest cultural achievements of
    Assyria was literature, which used at first a
    cuneiform alphabet from the Babylonians written
    on clay tablets. Later an Aramaic script written
    on parchment came to dominate. The literature
    dealt with a number of subjects like legal
    issues, medicine and history. Assyrian
    architecture used mud bricks, and occasionally
    stone. Houses and buildings never exceeded one
    storey and had flat roofs. While most houses were
    modest, palaces and temples could cover large
    areas inside the cities. Sculptures and wall
    carvings were another central part of Assyrian
    culture, and showed high skills in the crafts.
    Document cylinder seals became an art form by
    itself, as intricate patterns and shapes were
    given t these.

15
  • Taken from http//i-cias.com/e.o/assyria.htm
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