Review of the research programme on the Mortella III wreck (2010-2020, Corsica, France): A contribution to the knowledge of the Mediterranean naval architecture and material culture of the Renaissance

Open Res Eur. 2022 May 18:2:6. doi: 10.12688/openreseurope.13942.2. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The Mortella wrecks are the remains of two navi, Genoese seagoing merchant ships, sunk in 1527 in the Bay of Saint-Florent (Upper-Corsica, France) during the Seventh Italian War. A programme of archaeological excavations and historical research has been held on one of them, Mortella III, between 2010 and 2020. It has involved a multidisciplinary team around a European research project called ModernShip (Horizon 2020), whose objective is to shed light on Mediterranean shipbuilding during the Renaissance, a field still little known to this day. At the end of these 10 years, the aim of the present article is to conclude this research programme with the presentation of a scientific review that complements a recently published monograph on the Mortella III wreck. This study presents the latest results on the ship's architecture obtained during the excavation of the wreck in 2019, including a study of the wood of the framework. Finally, this article broadens our understanding of the nave presenting the results of a collaborative line of research on material culture with three studies in close connection with the ship architecture: artillery, anchors and ceramics.

Keywords: Boscaina; Corsica wrecks; Early modern naval architecture; Ferrara; Mediterranean 16th century; Mediterranean naval architecture; Mediterranean shipbuilding; Mortella; Mortella wrecks; Renaissance Mediterranean shipbuilding. Early modern shipbuilding; Renaissance shipbuilding.

Grants and funding

This research was financially supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme: grant agreement nº843337 ‘ModernShip Project: The structures of the Early Modern Mediterranean shipbuilding’.