Abstract
Excavations in the Bruges’ Medieval outer ports of Hoeke and Monnikerede, located along the Zwin tidal inlet, revealed numerous rounded cobbles of exotic geological provenance among which were two specimens of remarkable mineralogical composition. An interdisciplinary study combining archeological, geological, petrographic-geochemical, and historical research has demonstrated their Mediterranean, i.e., Italian, provenance. A first stone is identified as Carrara marble originating from the alluvial fans of the Apuan Alps, deposited along the Versilian coast near the Renaissance towns of Lucca, Pisa, and Genoa. The second cobble is determined as a bioclastic calcarenite limestone from the Apulian shores. Both finds are interpreted as part of the non-saleable ballast once put in the holds of Italian carracks and galleys that touched the Flemish ports during the late thirteenth to fifteenth centuries. As such, both seemingly ordinary objects constitute a rare material and lithological testimony of an important late Medieval commercial network between the Mediterranean and North Sea coasts. Furthermore, the very rare occurrence of these Mediterranean cobbles compared to thousands of Scando-Baltic and Anglo-Scottish ballast stones in the whole of the Bruges outer harbor area can be related to differences in maritime traffic frequency and sheer commercial volumes. Also, the nature of the ballast itself and the ballasting procedures are important, the whole making Mediterranean ballast stones considerably less detectable in the Bruges’ harbors than their North-European equivalents.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 579-602 |
Number of pages <span style="color:red"p> <font size="1.5"> ✽ </span> </font> | 24 |
Journal | Journal of Maritime Archaeology |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The authors wish to thank Dr. Julien Denaeyer (Liège University, Belgium), Prof. Francesca Bosellini and Prof. Cesare Andrea Papazzoni (Modena University, Italy), Prof. Lorenzo Lazzarini (IUAV University, Venezia, Italy) for discussing establishing the age of sample Hoe2018-18. Mr. Jan Tilleman (farmer at Hoeke) and Mr. Rik De Muelenaere (owner at Monnikerede) kindly provided access to their fields. Dr. Sibrecht Reniere (Dept. of Archaeology, Ghent University) kindly provided us the pictures for Fig. 6. The paper was written in the framework of the Ghent University GOA-project: “High Tide–Low Tide. The late-medieval harbor of Bruges as a maritime cultural landscape.”
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Copyright:
Copyright 2022 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords
- Ballast
- Medieval
- Bruges
- Maritime
- Italy
- Archaeometry
- Stone
- Stone provenance