Letters from the Mary Rose

$15.00 CAD

pp. 198, b/w and color photographs, “On 19 July 1545, Henry VIII’s favourite warship was moving out into the Solent with the rest of the fleet to thwart a French invasion. The wind had only just begun to stir, and she discharged a broadside at the French galleys. As she came about to discharge the other broadside, all her gunports being open, she was caught by a sudden gust, and the pride of the Tudor Navy heeled over, flooded and sank. In spite of determined attempts to raise her over the following weeks, she was to remain on the seabed for over four hundred years, until she was raised in 1982 and brought into dry dock at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, where she is now on display to the public. The museum houses a collection of everyday items retrieved from the hull during the world’s largest underwater archaeological excavation. These help to bring alive the Tudor period and tell the story of life on board the ship that is also reflected in these letters from the Mary Rose. “

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SKU: 103101 Category:

Book Information

ISBN 750928395
Published Date 2003
Book Condition Very Good
Jacket Condition Very Good
Binding Hb
Size 8vo
Place of Publication United Kingdom
Edition First Edition
Category:
Authors:,
Publisher:

Description

pp. 198, b/w and color photographs, “On 19 July 1545, Henry VIII’s favourite warship was moving out into the Solent with the rest of the fleet to thwart a French invasion. The wind had only just begun to stir, and she discharged a broadside at the French galleys. As she came about to discharge the other broadside, all her gunports being open, she was caught by a sudden gust, and the pride of the Tudor Navy heeled over, flooded and sank. In spite of determined attempts to raise her over the following weeks, she was to remain on the seabed for over four hundred years, until she was raised in 1982 and brought into dry dock at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, where she is now on display to the public. The museum houses a collection of everyday items retrieved from the hull during the world’s largest underwater archaeological excavation. These help to bring alive the Tudor period and tell the story of life on board the ship that is also reflected in these letters from the Mary Rose. “

Additional information

Weight 0.85 kg