The Magor Pill Medieval Wreck

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With contributions by Kate Barrow, Richard Brunning, Nigel Cameron, Astrid Caseldine, Simon Dobinson, Diane Dollery, Rowena Gale, Edwin Gifford, Martin Locock, Mark Redknap, Michael Ryder, Gary Thomas, Ian Tyers, Peter Webster, Adam Yates, and Tim Young, and line drawings by Richard Brunning, Tony Daly, Paul Jones and Nigel Nayling. In 1994 the distorted timbers of a medieval boat came to light at Magor Pill, on the coast of the Gwent Levels, when storms washed away the sediments which had covered them since the boat ran aground about 700 years ago. This report charts the complex and difficult excavation and recovery of the boat and its cargo of iron ore. Back in the laboratory the boat was dismantled and the individual timbers studied in detail to provide an accurate picture of the methods, raw materials, and tools used in the boat's construction and subsequent repair. Models of the boat were made, and these, together with assessment of contemporary documents and iconography, point to the Magor Pill boat being a double-ended vessel built in the Northern European tradition and adapted to meet the demands of trading in the Bristol Channel. Analysis of the sedimentary, environmental and historical data suggests that the vessel foundered close to the mouth of a tidal tributary near an established landing place known as Abergwaitha. The boat's discovery emphasises the importance of creek ports both in the Severn estuary and beyond during the medieval period.

Author(s): Nigel Nayling
Series: Council for British Archaeology. CBA Research Reports, 115
Publisher: Council for British Archaeology
Year: 1998

Language: English
Pages: 194
City: York

List of illustrations vii
List of tables x
Acknowledgements xi
List of contributors xii
Summaries: English, French, German, Welsh xiii
Introduction 1
The excavation evidence 6
The environmental evidence 28
The finds 41
The boat 45
The iron industry of south-east Wales in the 13th century 112
Oak dendrochronology 116
Beech dendrochronology 123
Reconstructing the Magor Pill boat 129
Building a full-size model 137
The historical and archaeological significance of the Magor Pill boat 143
Conservation strategy 155
Display 157
Conclusions 158
Glossary 160
Bibliography 163
Index 169