A Lost Warship from the 17th Century Called the “pplet”

Swedish marine archaeologists have discovered the long-lost sister ship of the Vasa, a 17th-century warship considered one of the Swedish navy’s biggest achievements that sank soon after setting sail, per a statement from the Swedish Museum of Wrecks.

With the help of the Swedish navy, the museum’s archaeologists surveyed a strait at Vaxholm, an island near Stockholm, where they first found the shipwreck last winter.

“Our pulses raced when we saw how similar the wreck was to Vasa,” says Jim Hansson, a maritime archaeologist at the museum, in the statement. “Both the construction and the powerful dimensions seemed very familiar. The hope of finding one of Vasa’s sister ships was sparked within us.”

Using the ship’s technical details as well as wood samples and measurement data, the team of archaeologists confirmed that the shipwreck was Äpplet, Vasa’s sister ship, according to the museum.

image

Unlike the Vasa,which sank within 20 minutes of setting sail in 1628, Äpplet (which means “the apple”)launched in 1629 and remained in service for about 30 years. In 1659, after an inspection concluded that the ship was not worth repairing, officials intentionally sank it.

Shipbuilder Hein Jacobsson constructed both vessels around the same time. But even before the Vasa set sail, Jacobsson worried that it was too narrow and likely to be unstable. With that in mind, he tried to correct those flaws in Äpplet.

Named after the house of Vasa, the Swedish royal family at the time, the 225-foot ship was fitted with 64 cannons, 3 masts and over 700 hand-carved wooden sculptures and ornaments. Many of the cannons sat on the ship’s upper decks, making the vessel’s center of gravity too high and ultimately hastening its demise. It sank on its maiden voyage outside Beckholmen, a small island in central Stockholm, Sweden, claiming about 30 lives. In 1961, a salvage operation recovered the Vasa. Today, itis on display at the Vasa Museum in Stockholm.

In 2019, archaeologists at the Swedish Museum of Wrecks thought they found Äpplet after discovering two other shipwrecks at Vaxholm. But surveys soon revealed that they were the Apollo and the Maria, both from 1648. Still, the archaeologists continued the search until their successful discovery last year.

image

“This will help us understand how the large warships evolved, from the unstable Vasa to seaworthy behemoths that could control the Baltic Sea—a decisive factor in Sweden’s emergence as a great power in the 1600s,” says Patrik Höglund, a maritime archaeologist at the museum, in the statement.

Äpplet sailed toward Germany when Sweden joined the Thirty Years’ War, carrying about 1,000 men. The vessel was also part of a project by the Swedish navy dating back to the mid-1500s to block a narrow strait off Vaxholm: In 1659, officials sank it—along with nine other large Swedish ships—to serve as part of an underwater barrier that would inhibit enemies from getting to Stockholm by sea.

image

Hansson says the ship’s discovery will allow experts to analyze differences between the designs of the Vasa and Äpplet and gain a better understanding of how Swedish shipbuilding evolved. “The find is also valuable for those who want to uncover a new piece of exciting history through the old ship,” he adds. “Äpplet is part of our cultural heritage, so we’re arranging a lecture at the museum where we tell visitors more about Äpplet.”

Researchers will make a 3-D image of the Äpplet wreck, Höglund tells CNN’s Hafsa Khalil. Because it is in a protected military area, the team has no plans to recover it.

Related Posts

Alien hunters claim a mysterious ‘monolith’ on Mercury is a doorway to another world—fueling bizarre theories of interplanetary portals.

Hold on to your tin foil hats, because this is a good one. Alien hunters have found what they claim to be an unexplained shadow on Mercury,…

The Whispering Stone: Ancient Art or Alien Echo?

The Whispering Stone: Ancient Art or Alien Echo?

This enigmatic carving is a Rorschach test etched in stone. Two figures peer out from the weathered surface, their oversized, almond-shaped eyes and bulbous heads mirroring the…

The Ancient Sentinel: A Baobab’s Whisper Across Time

The Ancient Sentinel: A Baobab’s Whisper Across Time

This is no ordinary tree. Gnarled and colossal, its trunk a tapestry of time-worn grooves, the baobab rises from the earth like a monument carved by forgotten…

The Bent Pyramid: A Monument to Imperfection

The Bent Pyramid: A Monument to Imperfection

The Bent Pyramid does not tower with the flawless geometry of Giza’s great tombs. Instead, it rises from the Dahshur desert like a question carved in limestone—its…

Guardians of the Eternal: The Silent Dialogue of the Desert Coffins

Guardians of the Eternal: The Silent Dialogue of the Desert Coffins

Standing sentinel in the vast emptiness of the desert, the two ancient Egyptian sarcophagi cut a striking silhouette against the endless horizon. Their once-vibrant colors, though faded…

The Enigma of the Alien-Like Artifact: A Mirror of Human Curiosity

The Enigma of the Alien-Like Artifact: A Mirror of Human Curiosity

Discovered under ambiguous circumstances, the mysterious stone carving depicting a humanoid figure with an exaggeratedly large, bulbous cranium continues to captivate both scholars and enthusiasts of the…