Edrotic Shipworks showed Roman trade details

Edrotic Shipworks showed Roman trade details

Edrotic Shipworks showed Roman trade details

Merchant ship facilitates trade between Roman ports

Edrotic ship debris. Courtesy of R. Schools.

Excavations with Croatia’s International Center for Underwater Archeology in Zadar have spent years in the country, cautiously digging a good safe Roman merchant ship in Barbir Bay. In the history of the first or second century CE, the vessel is about 40 40 feet tall and still maintains elements of the upper work of the ship, which is a rare search for such ancient skills.


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To seal the adratic

The initial excavation of the ship’s destruction revealed hundreds of olive pits. Meanwhile, the excavation of a nearby port from the same time has exposed the remains of grapes, peaches and walnuts. Together, the evidence suggests that the port was mainly used for agricultural trade between nearby Roman states, with a ship potentially a merchant vessel that sank shortly after leaving the port.

Taking photographs of the ship’s destruction. Courtesy of A Dave.

Recently, the archaeological team conducted a photographer’s matriculation of the ship’s clean remains. Using 3D modeling, they are intended to rebuild ancient ships to gain new insights about its naval capabilities, which will result in regional trade and travel details during this period. “It is an extremely stable and stable type of ship construction, which is capable of carrying heavy loads and long -range ceiling mediums. Such ships were essential for life 2,000 years ago, along with our coast and islands,” Croatian Underwater Arcology Company Navarchas owned a Press Relevance.

Until the first century, the region of the modern state of Croatia was included in the Roman Empire, as the province of Dalmatia, named after an important Alien tribal in the region. The Daltia remained under Roman, and then the Italian, before he won through the crotch sloves, who gave the country his modern name in the sixth and seventh centuries.


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