Description

Book Synopsis

What do characters as diverse as Alfred the Great, the architect Sir Christopher Wren, diarist Samuel Pepys and the Victorian poet Gerard Manley Hopkins have in common? All had some involvement in shipwrecks: in causing, recording or salvaging them. This book examines a variety of wrecks from logboats, Roman galleys and medieval cogs to East Indiamen, grand ocean liners, fishing boats and warships - all are woven into the history of shipwrecks along the coastline of England and in her territorial waters.

Wrecks are not just physically embedded in this marine landscape - they are also an intrinsic part of a domestic cultural landscape with links that go beyond the navy, mercantile marine and fishing trade. Evidence of shipwrecks is widespread: in literature, in domestic architecture and as a major component of industrial archaeology. Shipwrecks also transcend national boundaries, forming tangible monuments to the movement of goods and people between nations in war and peace. In peacetime they link the architecture and monuments of different countries, from shipyards to factories, warehouses to processing plants; in time of war wrecks have formed a landscape scattered across the oceans, linking friend and foe in common heritage.

England's Shipwreck Heritage explores the type of evidence we have for shipwrecks and their causes, including the often devastating effects fo the natural environment and human-led disaster. Ships at war, global trade and the movement of people - such as passengers, convict transports and the slave trade - are also investigated. Along the way we meet the white elephant who perished in 1730, the medieval merchant who pursued a claim for compensation for nearly 20 years, the most famous privateer for the American revolutionary wars and the men who held their nerve in the minesweeper trawls of the First World War. Highly illustrated and based on extensive new research, this book will appeal to anyone with an interest in England's maritime heritage.



Trade Review
Illustrated with a rich variety of historic images, contemporary engravings, paintings, and plates, and backed up with extensive archival reseach, this book's subtitle doesn't exaggerate - it charts everything from old log-boats through Roman wrecks, medieval cogs, East Indiamen and warships of all kinds up to submarines.
Leigh Bishop, Diver

Table of Contents
Introduction
Notes on the text
1. The hazards of the natural environment
2. Ships at war
3. The vagaries of human nature
4. The transport of people and goods around the world
5. Solving mysteries
6. How does it all come together? What is left to find out?
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index

England's Shipwreck Heritage: From logboats to

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A Hardback by Serena Cant

10 in stock


    View other formats and editions of England's Shipwreck Heritage: From logboats to by Serena Cant

    Publisher: Historic England
    Publication Date: 15/08/2013
    ISBN13: 9781848020443, 978-1848020443
    ISBN10: 1848020449

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    What do characters as diverse as Alfred the Great, the architect Sir Christopher Wren, diarist Samuel Pepys and the Victorian poet Gerard Manley Hopkins have in common? All had some involvement in shipwrecks: in causing, recording or salvaging them. This book examines a variety of wrecks from logboats, Roman galleys and medieval cogs to East Indiamen, grand ocean liners, fishing boats and warships - all are woven into the history of shipwrecks along the coastline of England and in her territorial waters.

    Wrecks are not just physically embedded in this marine landscape - they are also an intrinsic part of a domestic cultural landscape with links that go beyond the navy, mercantile marine and fishing trade. Evidence of shipwrecks is widespread: in literature, in domestic architecture and as a major component of industrial archaeology. Shipwrecks also transcend national boundaries, forming tangible monuments to the movement of goods and people between nations in war and peace. In peacetime they link the architecture and monuments of different countries, from shipyards to factories, warehouses to processing plants; in time of war wrecks have formed a landscape scattered across the oceans, linking friend and foe in common heritage.

    England's Shipwreck Heritage explores the type of evidence we have for shipwrecks and their causes, including the often devastating effects fo the natural environment and human-led disaster. Ships at war, global trade and the movement of people - such as passengers, convict transports and the slave trade - are also investigated. Along the way we meet the white elephant who perished in 1730, the medieval merchant who pursued a claim for compensation for nearly 20 years, the most famous privateer for the American revolutionary wars and the men who held their nerve in the minesweeper trawls of the First World War. Highly illustrated and based on extensive new research, this book will appeal to anyone with an interest in England's maritime heritage.



    Trade Review
    Illustrated with a rich variety of historic images, contemporary engravings, paintings, and plates, and backed up with extensive archival reseach, this book's subtitle doesn't exaggerate - it charts everything from old log-boats through Roman wrecks, medieval cogs, East Indiamen and warships of all kinds up to submarines.
    Leigh Bishop, Diver

    Table of Contents
    Introduction
    Notes on the text
    1. The hazards of the natural environment
    2. Ships at war
    3. The vagaries of human nature
    4. The transport of people and goods around the world
    5. Solving mysteries
    6. How does it all come together? What is left to find out?
    Appendix
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Acknowledgements
    Index

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