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Divers Find 300-Year-Old Ship Sunk by Drunken Crew

Only a few meters deep, most of the wreckage will remain in the water.
By Melissa Smith | Updated On March 15, 2021
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Divers Find 300-Year-Old Ship Sunk by Drunken Crew

A diver shines a flashlight on a jug from the shipwreck.

A diver shines a flashlight on a jug from the wreck.

Erling Tønnessen

A 300-year-old Irish ship that ran aground after the crew got drunk was recently found by a group of divers off the coast of Mandal, Norway.

According to the ship pilot’s written record, the entire crew had been drinking as they sailed The Providenz across the North Sea in November 1720. The waters were calm, but they still didn’t make it all the way to shore.

The Providenz sank in shallow waters off the southern Norwegian coast. All crew members were rescued, along with the ship’s anchor, sails and rigging.

For three centuries, The Providenz remained submerged in the cold Norwegian waters, hidden by only a several feet of water, until a group of divers from the Mandal Dive Club came across the ship.

The divers found a number of well-preserved artifacts, including a large clay pot, a chalk pipe, a few bottles and some porcelain.

“The bottom is full of beautiful objects [that are] completely intact,” Ragnvald Eeg, one of the divers who inspected the wreck, tells NRK News. “It is incredible to find something like this.”

A crab in shipwreckage

A crab nestles into the wreckage.

Erling Tønnessen

Jørgen Johannessen, an archaeologist and researcher at the Norwegian Maritime Museum, echoes Eeg, telling NRK that everything is well preserved.

“There are very few [wrecks] in such good condition as this one,” Johannessen says. “The jug does not have a single dent. Also, the ship is very whole to be so old. It makes the discovery very special.”

Most of the artifacts found on the wreck will remain on the seafloor for divers to explore. A sign signifying the cultural significance has been mounted near the wreck to make it clear the area is protected.

“We know that such finds are very attractive to wreck-looters,” says Frode Kvalø, another archaeologist at the Norwegian Maritime Museum. “At the same time, we think it’s important that divers should be able to go down to see such wrecks.”

Underwater sign

A sign marks the site as one of cultural significance.

Erling Tønnessen