Life-size replica of 18th century ship is up for sale

The replica, Gotheborg III, took 10 years to make using 18-century style shipbuilding techniques and materials.

Update: 2016-05-27 08:21 GMT
This file photo taken on June 06, 2013 shows the Swedish ship Gotheborg sailing on the Seine River as it makes its way to the city of Rouen, France. (Photo: AFP)

Stockholm:The world's largest seaworthy wooden ship of its class, a replica of a merchant vessel that sank in 1745 off the coast of Sweden for reasons still unknown, is up for sale after years on the seas. The Swedish foundation that owns the vessel "Gotheborg", a replica of the 18th century galleon from the Swedish East India Company, announced Thursday it could no longer afford the upkeep.

"This is a tough decision that we've been forced to make," said Lars Malmer,  chairman of the Ostindiefararen Gotheborg foundation. "We would have preferred it to continue sailing, but can confirm that the financial conditions do not exist," he said in a statement. The original, the East Indiaman Gotheborg, sank in 1745 within sight of its home port of Gothenburg on Sweden's west coast after nearly completing a two-year voyage home from China.

For reasons still unknown, the ship struck an underwater rock as it neared its home port. Within view of the harbour, the vessel sank slowly in shallow waters.
While the crew was rescued, almost nine tonnes of chinaware went down to the deep and was recovered only in the late 1980s by volunteer divers. The replica, Gotheborg III, took 10 years to make using shipbuilding techniques and materials believed to have been in use in the 18th century.

The foundation said carpenters used hand-forged nails, handmade blocks and hand-woven rigging to construct the 40-metre (130-foot) long and 10-metre wide vessel. However, the ship is equipped with modern technologies to meet current safety standards. The modern-day Gotherborg set sail for the first time in
August 2005 and began to retrace its old route west three months later.

It has since anchored in nearly 100 ports in over 20 countries, employed thousands of sailors and welcomed a million visitors aboard. Malmer said the foundation will consider any proposal to save the ship by selling it to buyers in any country, or to keep it in Gotheborg, the port city which owes its fortune to
trade during the 18th century. Malmer would not discuss the ship's selling price.

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