Category
page 1Archaeology of shipwrecks
Vasa
17th century Swedish warship
USS Monitor
1862 unique ironclad; first in United States Navy service
Viking Ship Museum
maritime history museum, archaeological museum in Roskilde, Denmark
Antikythera wreck
Roman shipwreck dating from the 2nd quarter of the 1st century BC
Mars
Swedish warship that was built between 1563 and 1564
HMS Pandora
1779 Porcupine-class post ship
HMS Royal George
1756 first-rate ship of the line
Ertuğrul
Ottoman frigate. Launched in 1863, sunk 1890.
Scilly naval disaster of 1707
loss of four Royal Navy vessels off the Isles of Scilly
Bremen cog
Wreck of a cog in the German Maritime Museum in Bremerhaven
Mahdia shipwreck
archaeological site in Tunisia
Gribshunden
Gribshunden or Griffen (English: "Griffin-Hound" or "Griffin"), also known by several variant names including Gribshund, Gripshunden, Gripshund, Griff, and Griffone, was a Danish warship, the flagship of Hans (John), King of Denmark (r. 1481–1513). Gribshunden sank in 1495 after an explosion while in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Ronneby in southeastern Sweden; the ship is one of the best-preserved wrecks yet discovered from the late medieval period.
baris
ancient Egyptian type of ship
Resurgam
thumb|A replica of the Resurgam, built in 1878–79. The replica was built in 1997 and is on display close to the Woodside, Merseyside|Woodside terminal of the [[Mersey Ferry in Birkenhead, Wirral]]
Resurgam (Latin: "I shall rise again") is an early submarine from the Victorian era and its prototype, designed and built in Britain by Reverend George Garrett. She was intended as a weapon to penetrate the chain netting placed around ship hulls to defend against attack by torpedo vessels.
Tek Sing
ship
HMS Association
1697 second-rate ship of the line
Barry Clifford
Underwater archeologist, discovered pirate ship Whydah
archaeology of shipwrecks
study of human activity through the analysis of shipwreck artifacts