
History never ceases to surprise us with recent discoveries, as has happened in Costa Rica, as several scientific analyses have confirmed that the wooden ships shipwrecked off its coast did not really belong to pirates.
On the shores of Cahuita National Park, on the southern Caribbean coast of Costa Rica, several groups of marine archaeologists have identified the remains of two shipwrecks that belonged to two missing Danish slave ships: the Fridericus Quartus and the Christianus Quintos.
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Experts, local residents and fishermen believed that these belonged to pirates, but everything has changed.
Everything changed in 2015, when this team of American analysts found yellow bricks typical of factories in Flensburg, Germany, which supplied Denmark and its colonies. In 2023, archaeologists from the National Museum of Denmark and the Viking Ship Museum excavated these sites, obtaining oak wood, clay pipe and brick fragments.
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This was analyzed and confirmed that it all came from the Baltic Sea and Danish quarries. The soot and charring of this wood matches several stories that tell that one of the ships was set on fire, namely the Fridericus Quartus, when it was coming from Ghana. On the other hand, the Christianus Quintus had its anchor rope cut and went adrift. A navigational error caused them to stay in Costa Rica in 1970, with both ships being shipwrecked.
For Costa Ricans, these findings have made these two ships not really pirate ships, putting an end to a historical account regarding the Christianus Quintus and the Fridericus Quartus, two ships that were shipwrecked for reasons unrelated to pirates, according to the analysis and findings.
This news was originally published on this post .
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