Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Science»Archaeologists Unearth Europe’s Oldest Naval Artillery on Sunken Royal Ship
    Science

    Archaeologists Unearth Europe’s Oldest Naval Artillery on Sunken Royal Ship

    By Lund UniversitySeptember 12, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    Phillip Short and Brendan Foley Recover a Gun Bed
    Phillip Short and Brendan Foley recover a gun bed from the wreck of Gribshunden, 2021. Credit: Klas Malmberg

    The shipwreck of Gribshunden revealed unique artillery and insights into European exploration. Denmark, however, prioritized Baltic control over Atlantic expansion.

    Archaeologists from Lund University have uncovered new information about late medieval artillery preserved in the wreck of the royal Danish-Norwegian flagship Gribshunden.

    This vessel is the only surviving example of its kind from the medieval era, with both the ship and its weaponry closely resembling those later used by early Spanish and Portuguese explorers. The research highlights how maritime powers of the late 15th century were equipped to begin asserting control and establishing colonies across the globe.

    “Exploring a royal shipwreck from the late medieval period is thrilling on its own. Yet the greatest reward comes when we can assemble the evidence afterward, drawing on Martin’s expertise in castles and Kay’s deep knowledge of artillery,” explains Brendan Foley, the marine archaeologist leading the project. He collaborated with fellow Lund University archaeologist Martin Hansson and medieval artillery specialist Kay Douglas Smith.

    Brendan Foley
    Brendan Foley. Credit: Lund University

    Gribshunden, the flagship of King Hans of Denmark and Norway, sank under mysterious circumstances in 1495 near Ronneby, Sweden. Its remains are of global importance, representing the best-preserved ship from the Age of Exploration and serving as a close parallel to the vessels of Columbus and Vasco da Gama.

    Ocean-going ships such as Gribshunden, along with the artillery they carried, became essential technologies for European seafaring after 1492. These innovations enabled voyages to the Americas and into the Indian Ocean around the Cape of Good Hope, paving the way for widespread European colonization. Gribshunden is particularly valuable to archaeology because it is the most intact example yet found of a late medieval carvel-built warship.

    Researchers Standing Beside Oak Beds
    Oak beds of artillery pieces recovered from the wreck of Gribshunden, curated at Blekinge Museum. Credit: University of Lund

    The ship was armed with 50 or more small-caliber guns that fired lead projectiles with iron cores. These weapons were designed for close-range combat, targeting the crews of enemy vessels to disable them before boarding for capture.

    Under the direction of Professor Nicolo Dell’Unto, the Lund University team digitally reconstructed these guns using 3D models created from the recovered artifacts.

    Brendan Foley, Mikkel Haugstrup Thomsen and Marie Jonsson
    Archaeologists Brendan Foley (Lund University), Mikkel Haugstrup Thomsen and Marie Jonsson (Viking Ship Museum) inspect an artillery bed and ship elements recovered from Gribshunden in 2021. Credit: Brett Seymour

    A Danish ‘floating castle’

    Gribshunden was built near Rotterdam between 1483-84. King Hans of Denmark and Norway had taken possession of the ship by spring 1486. The high cost of building and equipping these ships meant Gribshunden probably absorbed about 8% of the Danish national budget in 1485.

    Oak Beds of Artillery Pieces, Gribshunden
    Oak beds of artillery pieces recovered from the wreck of Gribshunden, curated at Blekinge Museum. Credit: Brendan Foley

    Hans utilized his flagship differently from other monarchs; he personally sailed on it frequently, using it not for exploration, but to solidify his grasp on his kingdom. It was his floating castle, enabling royal travel to Sweden and all around the Danish realm, including Gotland and especially Norway.

    The king used this vessel in ways similar to a terrestrial royal fortification. This included several soft power functions: economic, diplomatic, social, cultural, and administrative. Underpinning all of these was the obvious hard power of the ship’s martial purpose embodied by the guns and other weapons carried aboard.

    3D Scanner on a Oak Bed
    The artillery was uniquely preserved, likely due to favorable conditions in the Baltic Sea. Credit: Lund University

    Evidence of explosion

    Gribshunden served the crown for a decade before sinking while the king was en route from Copenhagen to a political summit in Sweden, where he expected to unify the entire Nordic region in a new Kalmar Union.

    Five Deformed Lead Shot
    Five flattened shot, possibly evidence of the explosion that sank Gribshunden in 1495. Credit: Morgan Olsson, Blekinge Museum

    Historical documents, including eyewitness accounts, relate that while Hans was ashore in Ronneby, an explosion and fire claimed the ship while it was anchored off the town.

    Among the 22-lead artillery shots from Gribshunden, several are flattened on one or two sides. This may be a result of the explosion that sank the vessel. Shot stored in the hold near the gunpowder ricocheted inside the ship.

    Marie Jonsson Holds a Crossbow
    Viking Ship Museum archaeologist Marie Jonsson holds a crossbow stock recovered from Gribshunden in 2021. Credit: Staffan von Arbin

    No Nordic expansion into North America

    So, given the existence of these warships, why didn’t Denmark compete in expanding to the Americas? Denmark and Norway shared the long Viking and medieval Nordic history of exploration and settlement in the west, with colonies in Iceland and Greenland, and settlements in North America.

    Coupled with the adoption of this new enabling technology, Hans might have successfully competed with the Iberian rulers in global exploration and expansion to the Americas.

    Gun Bed, Gribshunden With Scale
    Gun bed 29812.45 on the wreck site immediately after discovery in 2022, and rendering from 3D model. Credit: Brett Seymour, 2022; Carolina Larsson, Lund University HumLab

    However, Hans’ primary concern was consolidating rule over the Baltic region. In pursuit of that goal, Hans himself sailed on Gribshunden into the Atlantic on several royal visits, and to Kalmar on the ship’s final voyage.

    Diving at the Gribshunden Wreck
    Diving at the Gribshunden wreck. Credit: Klas Malmberg

    One reason for Denmark’s inattention to the Americas might have been a 1493 papal bull signed by Pope Alexander VI. This granted Spain rights to the Americas, and a treaty between Spain and Portugal ceded the Indian Ocean to the latter. Prior to the Reformation, the threat of excommunication for ignoring the papal ‘Inter Caetera’ was very real.

    Reference: “Late Medieval Shipboard Artillery on a Northern European Carvel: Gribshunden (1495)” by Brendan Foley, Kay Douglas Smith and Martin Hansson, 31 July 2025, International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.
    DOI: 10.1080/10572414.2025.2532166

    The research was funded by grants from the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet), Crafoordska Stifltelsen, Huckleberry Foundation (USA), and with support from Blekinge Museum and the Lund University Department of Archaeology and Ancient History.

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.

    Archaeology History Lund University
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    This Archaeologist Sailed Like a Viking for 3 Years and Made an Unexpected Discovery

    Recent Human Ancestor Regularly Climbed Trees Like Apes

    Dead in Unmarked Graves Identified by Combining Genetics With Genealogy

    Mystery Surrounding Dinosaur Footprints on a Cave Ceiling Finally Solved

    How Ancient Poop Debunked Myth of Native American Lost Civilization

    Mystifying Puzzle of Early Neolithic House Orientations Finally Solved

    Previously Dismissed As Myths, New Study Boosts Credibility of Columbus’ Cannibal Claims

    Archaeologists Reveal Swedes Have Been Brewing Beer Since The Iron Age

    Cave Site Reveals 78,000-Year-Old Record of Stone Age Innovation

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    Worse Than We Thought: “Forever Chemicals” Are Far More Acidic Than Previously Believed

    Scientists Find a Way to Stop Breast Cancer From Coming Back

    Inexpensive New Liquid Battery Could Replace $10,000 Lithium Systems

    New Research Reveals Not All Ultra-Processed Foods Are Bad

    Lost for a Century: First-Ever Images Reveal Sunken WWI Submarine’s Final Resting Place

    Astronomers Just Found a “Zombie Star” With a Shocking Backstory

    The Famous “Unhappiness Hump” Has Vanished, and Youth Are Paying the Price

    Weight-Loss Drug Mounjaro Shrinks Breast Cancer Tumors in Mice

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • Invasive Flathead Catfish Rise to Apex Predator in Pennsylvania
    • The Ocean’s Most Abundant Life Form May Not Survive Global Warming
    • For the First Time in 40 Years, Panama’s Ocean Lifeline Has Vanished
    • The Newly Found Bone Switch That Could Stop Osteoporosis
    • Heart Attacks May Be Infectious and Vaccines Could Prevent Them
    Copyright © 1998 - 2025 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.