Remarkably well-preserved wreck of a 2,000-year-old Ancient Roman ‘sewn ship’ unearthed in Croatia 

Remarkably well-preserved wreck of a 2,000-year-old Ancient Roman ‘sewn ship’ that was stitched together using ropes and wooden nails is unearthed in Croatia

  • The vessel was unearthed next to an ancient pier in the waterfront of Poreč
  • Experts are calling the ship Croatia’s greatest archaeological find of the century
  • The vessel’s hull was essentially ‘sewn’ together using ropes and wooden nails
  • Experts believe that the 16 feet long, one-masted ship was a private fishing boat

The remarkably well-preserved wreck of a 2,000-year-old Ancient Roman ‘sewn ship’ that was stitched together using ropes and wooden nails has been found in Croatia.

The vessel was unearthed from the Porta de Mar archaeological site on the ancient waterfront of the town of Poreč, where it had sunk near an ancient pier.

Two thousand years ago, Poreč was part of the Roman province of Dalmatia and the town’s shielded harbour made it ideal for both defence and maritime trade.

Experts are calling the ship Croatia’s greatest archaeological discovery of the century — one that is shining light on ancient ship-building practices.

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The remarkably well-preserved wreck of a 2,000-year-old Ancient Roman ‘sewn ship’ that was stitched together using ropes and wooden nails, pictured, has been found in Croatia

Found embedded in the mud, the 16 feet (5 metres) -long wreck of the sailboat retained many of its original timbers.

‘It was well preserved because it was at a certain depth in the soil and could not be penetrated by oxygen,’ archaeologist Klaudia Bartolić Sirotić told Croatia Week.

Much of the ship’s ‘formwork, ribs, and keel’ survived to the present day, Ms Bartolić Sirotić told Archaeology.org — and the researchers were able to observe the imprint that the rest of the vessel had left in the mud to determine the type of ship it was.

The team believe that the vessel had but a single sail — and was likely a small private fishing boat. 

So-called ‘sewn ships’ are characteristic of the boatwrights of the northern Adriatic back in the first century AD — and featured planks in the outer hull that were essentially stitched together, using ropes and wooden nails known as ‘spots’.

‘Every stitch that is made is recorded [in the wreck],’ Ms Bartolić Sirotić told Croatia Week.

Large wooden nails were then used to attach the outer hull to the inner frame. 

The vessel was unearthed from the Porta de Mar archaeological site on the ancient waterfront of the town of Poreč, where it had sunk near an ancient pier

The vessel was unearthed from the Porta de Mar archaeological site on the ancient waterfront of the town of Poreč, where it had sunk near an ancient pier

Two thousand years ago, Poreč was part of the Roman province of Dalmatia and the town's shielded harbour made it ideal for both defence and maritime trade. Pictured, a close-up of the ship's hull, in which the ropes and spots can be seen

Two thousand years ago, Poreč was part of the Roman province of Dalmatia and the town’s shielded harbour made it ideal for both defence and maritime trade. Pictured, a close-up of the ship’s hull, in which the ropes and spots can be seen

The Porta de Mar find is not unique to Croatia — however, most of the sewn ships from the country date back to earlier periods and were unearthed by marine archaeologists underwater, making them much harder to study.

‘This specimen from Poreč is one of three boats found on land that are not part of an underwater archaeological survey,’ Ms Bartolić Sirotić added. 

The vessel was unearthed as a result of a redevelopment project that will see the Poreč renovated and made more pedestrian-friendly.

In the meantime, the archaeologists are working to complete their study of the boat where it was found, before the remains are removed and conserved with a mind towards being displayed to the public at the  Poreč museum. 

Experts are calling the ship Croatia's greatest archaeological discovery of the century — one that is shining light on ancient ship-building practices

Experts are calling the ship Croatia’s greatest archaeological discovery of the century — one that is shining light on ancient ship-building practices

The vessel was unearthed as a result of a redevelopment project that will see the Poreč renovated and made more pedestrian-friendly

The vessel was unearthed as a result of a redevelopment project that will see the Poreč renovated and made more pedestrian-friendly

The vessel was unearthed from the Porta de Mar archaeological site on the ancient waterfront of the town of Poreč, where it had sunk near an ancient pier

The vessel was unearthed from the Porta de Mar archaeological site on the ancient waterfront of the town of Poreč, where it had sunk near an ancient pier