The Shipwreck At Black Assarca Island, Eritrea
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The Black Assarca shipwreck was first discovered by tourists in 1995, at Black Assarca Island,
Eritrea Eritrea, officially the State of Eritrea, is a country in the Horn of Africa region of East Africa, with its capital and largest city being Asmara. It is bordered by Ethiopia in the Eritrea–Ethiopia border, south, Sudan in the west, and Dj ...
. The wreck was surveyed in 1995 and partially excavated in 1997 by the
Institute of Nautical Archaeology The Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) is an organization devoted to the study of humanity's interaction with the sea through the practice of archaeology. It is the world’s oldest organization devoted to the study of nautical archaeology. ...
, under the auspices of the Ministry of Marine Resources of Eritrea. The 1997 excavation team, headed by Ralph K. Pedersen, discovered various artifacts of Near Eastern/Mediterranean origin, including
amphora An amphora (; ; English ) is a type of container with a pointed bottom and characteristic shape and size which fit tightly (and therefore safely) against each other in storage rooms and packages, tied together with rope and delivered by land ...
s of a type known as " Ayla-Axum Amphoras", or more accurately "Aqaba Amphoras" after their point of manufacture. These long and conical "carrot shaped" amphoras, decorated with corrugations, or rilling, have been found previously at such sites as:
Aksum Axum, also spelled Aksum (), is a town in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia with a population of 66,900 residents (as of 2015). It is the site of the historic capital of the Aksumite Empire. Axum is located in the Central Zone of the Tigray Regi ...
, the capital of the Aksumite Kingdom; Metara;
Adulis Adulis (Sabaic, Sabaean: 𐩱 𐩵 𐩡 𐩪, , ) was an ancient city along the Red Sea in the Gulf of Zula, about south of Massawa. Its ruins lie within the modern Eritrean list of cities in Eritrea, city of Zula. It was the emporium (antiquit ...
, the Aksumite port city located on the west side of Zula Bay; Berenike, the
Ptolemaic Ptolemaic is the adjective formed from the name Ptolemy, and may refer to: Pertaining to the Ptolemaic dynasty *Ptolemaic dynasty, the Macedonian Greek dynasty that ruled Egypt founded in 305 BC by Ptolemy I Soter *Ptolemaic Kingdom Pertaining t ...
harbor in Egypt; and
Aqaba Aqaba ( , ; , ) is the only coastal city in Jordan and the largest and most populous city on the Gulf of Aqaba. Situated in southernmost Jordan, Aqaba is the administrative center of the Aqaba Governorate. The city had a population of 148, ...
,
Jordan Jordan, officially the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, is a country in the Southern Levant region of West Asia. Jordan is bordered by Syria to the north, Iraq to the east, Saudi Arabia to the south, and Israel and the occupied Palestinian ter ...
. Based on the finds at these sites, the Black Assarca ceramics are thought to date from around the 5th or 6th century, with the wreck possibly dating from the early 7th century. Although all but one of the Aqaba amphoras excavated were broken, they formed a cohesive body of material. Some amphoras were simply missing handles. Others had necks broken off as well, while many had broken bodies. Several of the Aqaba amphoras were cleanly broken at the joint where the upper body segment joined the bottom segment. The juncture, a naturally weak spot in the vessels, was obvious on all the narrow conical amphoras. Unlike the evenly spaced rilling elsewhere on the amphora bodies the rilling added to the joint was irregular and generally coarse in its execution. Rilling was present on all the amphoras and sherds excavated, spaced approximately 1.2 cm apart, and apparently done on the potter’s wheel. Rilling started immediately above the toe button, and from there it crafted as a continuous spiral to the neck, interrupted only at the joint. Rilling was peculiar to the eastern Mediterranean in the first millennium AD and has been found on several ceramic forms in a number of sites (Pedersen 2008: 82). The interior faces of many sherds and amphora bodies were coated with a blackish substance, reminiscent of Mediterranean wine amphoras that were sealed with a resin to prevent the liquids inside from leaching through the ceramic. One sherd, comprising approximately the lower 15 cm of an amphora, was split vertically down through the toe button. The piece was filled with a solid mass of resin, probably excess that collected in the bottom when the interior of the vessel was being sealed, or perhaps being the transport item itself. This revealed that the toe button was hollow. Buttons generally receive the brunt of damage in shipping amphorae as they rest on dunnage, other cargoes, hulls, and docksides. None of the buttons examined showed wear beyond what one would expect for new vessels being transported from potter’s shop to dock to ship. Perhaps this indicates that the amphoras were new and not reused (Pedersen, 2008: 83). Other finds include a counterbalance weight for a
steelyard The Steelyard, from the Middle Low German (sample yard), was the kontor (foreign trading post) of the Hanseatic League in London, and their main trading base in England, between the 13th and 16th centuries. The main goods that the League export ...

a piece of glass
and two other amphora types: one
round, or globular amphora
known as a costrel, and the other
wider version of the conical type
Both of these amphora types share stylistic characteristics with the Aqaba vessels demonstrating a common cultural venue and origin point. No ship's hull remains were found in the 1997 excavation season.


References


"The Byzantine-Aksumite Period Shipwreck at Black Assarca Island, Eritrea"
Ralph Pedersen's Nautical Archaeology. Archived 13 November 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2024. *Blue, Lucy,
The Red Sea
, in ''The Oxford Handbook of Maritime Archaeology''.Edited by Ben Ford, Donny L. Hamilton, and Alexis Catsambis. Oxford, 2013. *Garnayak, D. B., Hazarika, M., & Mishra, K. (n.d.). Cultural Interaction between Ancient Abyssinia and India: Archaeological Sources from 1st to 7th century CE. Journal of Indian Ocean Archaeolog, 10–11, 133–146. *
www.academia.edu/329268/The_Byzantine-Aksumite_Period_Shipwreck_at_Black_Assarca_Island_Eritrea
* Pedersen, R. K., & Brandmeier, R. (2016). "Nabataean Seafaring and the Search for Shipwrecks in the Red Sea." In N. I. Khairy (Ed.), ''Studies on the Nabataean Culture II'' (pp. 11–24). Amman, Jordan: Deanship of Academic Research, University of Jordan. *Power, T. (2010). The Red Sea Region During the "Long" Late Antiquity (AD 500-1000). Oxford. *Seland, E. H. (2014). Archaeology of Trade in the Western Indian Ocean, 300 BC–AD 700. Journal of Archaeological Research, 1–36. JOUR. http://doi.org/10.1007/s10814-014-9075-7 {{coord missing, Eritrea Shipwrecks of Africa Archaeological sites in Eritrea Archaeology of Eastern Africa Shipwrecks of Eritrea