The Oranjemund shipwreck, Namibia. The excavation of sub-Saharan Africa’s oldest discovered wreck
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Authors
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Volume Title
Publisher
Society of Cultural Studies and Social Sciences, Hong Kong
Abstract
On 1 April 2008, parts of an historic shipwreck were unearthed during diamond-mining operations near Oranjemund, Namibia. Initial investigations undertaken during that same month indicated that it was, most probably, the remnants of an outward-bound Portuguese ship that foundered during the second quarter of the sixteenth century. The Oranjemund shipwreck is the oldest wreck ever found in sub-Saharan Africa and received world-wide attention in the media. After an initial survey was undertaken and a representative sample of artifacts and ecofacts recovered, the site was reburied. Following this, the Namibian Government stepped in and took control of the project. A Second Phase investigation was undertaken under supervision of the author during September and October 2008, resulting in full-scale excavation of the site. This article describes aspects of archaeological fieldwork.
Description
Keywords
Shipwrecks, Oranjemund, Namibia
Sustainable Development Goals
None
Citation
Werz, B.E.J.S. 2009, ‘The Oranjemund shipwreck, Namibia. The excavation of sub-Saharan Africa’s oldest discovered wreck’, Journal of Namibian Studies, vol. 6, pp. 81-106.
