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Full Description
Nearly 400 years have passed since the naval ship Vasa sank in Stockholm in 1628, and more than 60 years since its salvage in 1961. Today, Vasa stands as an iconic symbol—a ship, a shipwreck, a museum, and a unique manifestation of the material culture of Sweden's early modern navy. But Vasa is not the only Swedish naval vessel of its time. Sweden's naval records reveal nearly 900 other ships, each with a story very different from Vasa's. Some were sunk in battle, many served in the navy for decades, others were repurposed as construction elements in harbours, or deliberately sunk at the entrances to Swedish cities and naval bases as obstacles for the enemy.
This volume focuses on and examines these forgotten or hidden ships as material culture, broadly defined to encompass all remains of the navy, from shipwrecks on the seabed to museum objects, archives, cannons, and even coffins made from ship timbers. The book highlights how new methods, techniques, and materials can challenge and enrich naval studies. It is the result of an interdisciplinary collaboration between underwater archaeology, history, ethnology, and cultural heritage studies from both Sweden and Finland.
Contents
1. Introduction: Material Culture in the Swedish Navy, c. 1450-1850 (Simon Ekström, Niklas Eriksson, Anna Maria Forssberg, and Leos Müller) 2. The Introduction of Carvel Shipbuilding in Sixteenth-century Sweden: A History Told from Caulking Laths (Niklas Eriksson) 3. Supplying Fighting Power: Food Chains in the Swedish Navy 1563-65 (Ingvar Sjöblom) 4. Upplands Leijonet 1572-92: A Forgotten Warship in the Swedish Royal Navy (Dan Johansson) 5. Casks and Boxes: What the Personal Belongings on Vasa can tell us about Life in the Navy in the Seventeenth Century (Anna Maria Forssberg and Fred Hocker) 6. The Wrecks in Djupasund: Identifying Early Modern Warships in Swedish Waters - Problems, Challenges, and Solutions (Patrik Höglund and Jim Hansson) 7. An Archaeological Study of an Underwater Cannon Site in the Sea Fortress Suomenlinna, the Baltic Sea (Minna Koivikko, Tuomas Aakala, Sami Brchisky, David Cleasby, Kari Hyttinen, Jesse J. Jokinen, Xavier Le Rudulier, and Liisa Näsänen) 8. The Swedish Navy beyond Skagerrak: Ships' Careers in Global History, c. 1600-1800 (Leos Müller) 9. Stories of Lost and Found: Recovered Ships' Guns as Enduring Material Artifacts (Simon Ekström) 10. Admirals, Ships and Burials: The Materiality of a Nineteenth-century Shipwood Casket (Mirja Arnshav) 11. The Swedish Navy in the Age of Sail: "Elite-Objects" in the Exhibitions of the Swedish Naval Museum in 1997 (Andreas Linderoth)



