16 March 2025 The Future is the Product of the Past

Medieval Weapon Chest Found on Sunken Medieval Flagship Gribshunden

An extensive exploration of the wreck of the royal flagship Gribshunden has unearthed a trove of new findings: new insights into combat platforms of warships and a unique weapon chest from the Late Middle Ages.

The research was carried out in collaboration with underwater archaeologists from Södertörn University and CEMAS/Institute of Archeology and Ancient Culture at Stockholm University.

The Gribshunden (also known as Griffin or Griffin-Hound) was the flagship of King John I of Denmark (1481–1513), ruler of the Kalmar Union. In 1495, the Danish warship Gribshunden sank off the coast of Sweden. The wreck was discovered in the 1970s by recreational divers but not disclosed to researchers until the year 2000.

The most recent fieldwork on the wreck occurred in May of last year. The research team, led by Professor Johan Rönnby of Södertörn University and PhD candidate Rolf Warming of Stockholm University, used underwater cameras and photogrammetric 3D technology to inspect and document additional parts of the ship’s remains.

Highlights of the research include the discovery of a wooden war chest, analysis of mail armor, and a better understanding of the ship’s superstructure.

Ammunition-making tool chest (Zeuglade in German) with contents. The solid line indicates the elongated side of the chest; the dotted lines indicate the estimated placement of its sides. Contents: (1) lead plates, (2-3) molds, (4) the chest’s elongated side along with iron corrosion (from the lock and fittings?), (5) cylindrical ‘cans’ (possibly powder containers), and (6) mold. Photo: Dr. Florian Huber, with outlines and notes by Rolf Warming.
Ammunition-making tool chest (Zeuglade in German) with contents. The solid line indicates the elongated side of the chest; the dotted lines indicate the estimated placement of its sides. Contents: (1) lead plates, (2-3) molds, (4) the chest’s elongated side along with iron corrosion (from the lock and fittings?), (5) cylindrical ‘cans’ (possibly powder containers), and (6) mold. Photo: Dr. Florian Huber, with outlines and notes by Rolf Warming.

The exploration of a chest was one of the most significant discoveries made during the most recent dive. They identified the contents of the ‘weapon tool chest’ after taking high-resolution photos of it. It is a zeuglade, an ammunition storage and production toolbox that we know from illustrations around that time often accompanied armies on battlefields.

The researchers write: “The contents of the chest are heavily corroded but appear to consist of several different objects located within a larger crust of corroded iron. In the crust, there are several sharp flint pieces, which may be interpreted as part of canister shot ammunition… In the northern half of the remains, it is possible to distinguish two elongated pieces of lead plate with some holes along the edge (presumably for easier handling during the casting process) and at least three stone molds for lead bullets of different calibers. The molds were intended for the production of bullets for handheld firearms, such as a handgonne, but also for larger caliber firearms, possibly arquebuses or smaller breech-loaded guns.”

The chest and its contents probably belonged to the German mercenaries who were onboard when the Gribshunden sank. It is unquestionably an important artifact of medieval military technology.

Decorative hem consisting of riveted brass rings for a mail shirt (hauberk) analyzed in connection with the dives. A mail shirt of this quality could have consisted of up to 150,000 rings. Photo: Rolf Warming.
Decorative hem consisting of riveted brass rings for a mail shirt (hauberk) analyzed in connection with the dives. A mail shirt of this quality could have consisted of up to 150,000 rings. Photo: Rolf Warming.

The researchers have identified a significant portion of the ship’s superstructure, which has been preserved despite the timbers being split and dispersed across the seabed, by mapping the timbers at the wreck site. These timbers can give researchers important insights into how the superstructure looked and thus the warship’s military capabilities.

In addition to the diving work, a study was also carried out involving previously recovered fragments from mailshirts. In collaboration with Professor Kerstin Lidén of Stockholm University’s Archaeological Research Laboratory, the researchers found that the ring weave had multiple threads and construction methods, suggesting that it had been repaired multiple times. Hauberks, or mail shirts, like these might have held up to 150,000 rings, judging by the size of the preserved rings.

An early firearm and a drinking tankard were found during prior dives conducted under Prof. Johan Rönnby’s direction, and research suggests that the ship was most likely built in the southern Netherlands.

Stockholm University

Cover Photo: Florian Huber

Related Articles

12,000-Year-Old rock art may depict extinct giants of the ice age

13 March 2022

13 March 2022

South America was filled with ice age animals more than 12,000 years ago, including car-sized ground sloths, elephantine herbivores, and...

Researchers Say that Neanderthals Had the Same Hearing Capacity as Humans

1 March 2021

1 March 2021

Virtual reconstructions of Neanderthal ears show that had the same physical capacity for hearing as modern humans, and by inference...

A farmer discovered artifacts of the Unetice culture in his field

19 August 2021

19 August 2021

A farmer in Sulęcin county in Poland’s Lubusz province discovered a rare treasure while trying to clear stones from his...

Ancient Roman coin thought to be fake -certainly authentic and proves the existence of ‘forgotten’ leader Sponsian, study claims

26 November 2022

26 November 2022

History is littered with artifacts that were later discovered to be forgeries, but the opposite can also occur. A new...

Archaeologists conducting excavations at the Roman Fort of Apsaros in Georgia, found evidence of the Legion X Fretensis

27 May 2023

27 May 2023

Polish scientists discovered that Legion X Fretensis, known for its brutal suppression of Jewish uprisings, was stationed in the early...

Archaeologists Uncovered a Roman-Era Clay Theater Ticket in Ancient City of Prusias ad Hypium

1 December 2024

1 December 2024

Excavations at the ancient city of Prusias Ad Hypium in the Konuralp region of Düzce in northwestern Türkiye have uncovered...

5,000-Year-Old public eating space with food still inside discovered in ancient Lagash

2 February 2023

2 February 2023

Archaeologists have unearthed the remains of a public eating space that’s nearly 5,000 years old in southern Iraq, the University...

Extraordinary Discovery of a Unique Painted Tomb in Tarquinia’s Etruscan Necropolis

1 February 2025

1 February 2025

Exceptional discovery in the necropolis of Tarquinia, located near the western coast in central Italy, north of Rome (a UNESCO...

A Roman copper-alloy tiny tortoise figurine found in Suffolk

3 December 2023

3 December 2023

In July last year, a small Roman copper alloy tortoise or turtle figurine was discovered by metal detectors near the...

Giant handaxe discovered at Ice Age site in Kent, UK

8 July 2023

8 July 2023

Researchers in Kent in southeastern England have discovered a prehistoric handaxe so big it would have been almost impossible to...

Do Byzantine coins Record the Supernova of 1054?

25 June 2022

25 June 2022

SN 1054 was one of the most spectacular astronomical events of all time. The supernova explosion eventually formed what is...

Turkey to Present 12 Historic Artifacts to Istanbul Patriarch

10 August 2021

10 August 2021

The government said on Monday that Turkey will deliver stolen icons from ancient local churches to Istanbul’s Fener Greek Patriarch...

Getting to Know Matar Kubilea

8 February 2021

8 February 2021

Hittite state’s, With its collapse in 1200-1190 BC, Anatolia entered a period of drift from holistic to dispersal. (The Hittite...

Stonehenge could be a solar calendar, according to a new study

2 March 2022

2 March 2022

A new study posits that the Stonehenge circles served as a calendar that tracks the solar year of 365.25 days,...

White grape pips found in the Negev dated may be the oldest of its kind worldwide

29 April 2023

29 April 2023

Researchers from the University of York, Tel Aviv University, and the University of Copenhagen provide new insight into the mystery...