List of shipwrecks in the 16th century

The list of shipwrecks in the 16th century includes ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost between (and including) the years 1501 to 1600.

1501–1510

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1502

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  • 11 July El Dorado: The Spanish carrack sank during a hurricane in the Mona Channel between Hispaniola and Puerto Rico with the loss of all on board. El Dorado was the flagship of a thirty-two strong fleet heading for Spain. Sources vary but at least another sixteen ships were also wrecked.[1]
  • 11 July Santa Maria del Antigua: Part of the fleet led by Francisco de Bobadilla, the Spanish carrack sank during a hurricane off Santo Domingo.[2]
  • 5 October Mîrî: Attacked by Captain Matoso on the orders of Vasco da Gama, the pilgrim ship was captured at Madayi, India and the cargo taken. The Muslim pilgrims travelling from Calicut, India to Mecca were locked in the hold, the ship set on fire and sunk by artillery taking several days to sink. The survivors were speared by Portuguese soldiers and an estimated three hundred people killed. The ship was a victim of the 4th Portuguese India Armada led by Vasco da Gama.[3][4]
  • unknown date San Antón: The Spanish caravel ran aground on the (future) site of Port-au-Prince, Haiti while attempting to recover gold from the wreck of the Santa María de Gracia. The crew was picked up by the Santo Domingo.[5]
  • unknown date Santa María de Gracia: The Spanish caravel sank near the coast of Hispaniola after the hull was weakened by shipworm.[6]

1503

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1505

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1511–1520

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1511

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  • 20 April — São Pedro (  Portugal): While on a journey to India, with five other caravels under the command of Garcia de Noronha, the islets of Saint Peter and Saint Paul was accidentally discovered when the São Pedro sailed onto one of them.[9] The crew was rescued by the Saint Paul, hence the name of the archipelago.

1512

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Cordelière and Regent.

1514

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  • 21 February (first report) — Unidentified (  Spain): Lost at Polkemyas (now known as Porth Kidney sands), near Lelant, St Ives Bay, Cornwall, in the manor of Lelant and Trevethowe. She was carrying a cargo of cloth (including scarlet).[11]

1515

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1516

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1517

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1517 or 1518

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  • Unidentified vessel: Wrecked near Carrack Loys, near Marckayowe (St Michael's Mount), Cornwall with a cargo of hogsheads of wine, which was divided between James Chynowythe, Richard Pendre and Sir John Arundell.[13]

1518

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1520

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1521–1530

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1521

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1523

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1525

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1526

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1527

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1531–1540

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1531

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  • Unidentified vessel Wrecked on the cliffs near "Innyall Chappell (Chapel Jane, Gurnard's Head), Cornwall with the loss of all on board. The vessel was carrying salt. Anchors, cables and timber was salvaged and shared 50/50 between the finders and Sir John Arundell, Master Lord of the Franchise.[35]

1532

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  • (First report) — Unidentified vessels: Harry Angwyne sworn at Court that he often saw wrecks of timbers cast on the land at Whitsonbay and other places around Land's End, Cornwall.[15]
  • (First report) — Unidentified vessel: Lost at the Longships, off Land's End, Cornwall.[15]
  • (First report) — Unidentified vessel: Barrel of tar washed up at Gwynver, Sennen, Cornwall and barrel of flower (flour) washed up in Whitson Bay in Gonhellye under Meen.[15]

1533

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  • October — Bona Confidentia, Bona Esperanza and Edward Bonaventure (all   England): The ships became trapped in ice off the coast of what is now Canada. Their crews perished in January 1534.[36]
  • Bom Jesus (  Portugal) — The ship was wrecked on the coast of Africa while on a voyage from Lisbon to India.[37]

1537

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  • 30 November — Concepción (  Spain): The Carrack (nau) was wrecked at Ponta Loyola, estuary of the Gallegos River, Argentina while part of a two ship trading expedition. The crew were rescued by the Santa Maria .[38]

1540

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  • 23 January — Capitana (  Spain): The carrack (nau) was part of an expedition to the Pacific coast of South America when she was wrecked north-east of the Primera Angostura, within the Strait of Magellan. The crew was rescued by another of the expedition's ships.[39]
  • January — Trinidad (  Spain): The sailing ship was seen at Cedros Island, Baja California before heading north and not seen again.[40]

1541–1550

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1542

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1543

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1544

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1545

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1550

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1551–1560

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1552

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  • 8 June — São João (  Portugal): The galleon was wrecked during a storm near Port Edward, South Africa. Approximately 120 died in the wreck while the remaining 500 survivors had to march to the mouth of the Maputo River. Only twenty-five survived due to attacks from indigenous people, starvation and disease.[52]
  • La Magdalena (  Spain): The nau was wrecked in the Azores.[53]
  • Santiago (  Spain): The nau sank in the harbour at Angra, Terceira Island, Azores after unloading the cargo from Mexico.[54]

1554

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1555

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1556

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1557

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1558

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  • 25 February — San Sebastian (  Spain): The carrack (nau) ran aground during a gale on the coast of Chile near Canal Trinidad.[69]
  • Unidentified A ship carrying people from Dublin is said to have run aground off Rathlin Island, northern Ireland.[70]

1559

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  • 21 November — Nossa Senhora da Graça (  Portugal): The carrack (nau) foundered during a storm and sank between Mozambique and Cochin, India. The crew were rescued by the Aquia (  Portugal and the captain died shortly after.[71]

1561–1570

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1564

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1565

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  • San Juan (  Spain): A Basque whaling ship sank at Red Bay, Labrador.
  • Unnamed sailing vessel foundered in Mount's Bay, Cornwall, possibly near Newlyn where an anchor was found. The year of loss is given as the 7th or 8th year of Elizabeth I reign (beginning 17 November 1565 to 1567).[73]

1567

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1568

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1570

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  • Victoria (  Spain): The first ship to circumnavigate the globe (1519-1522), the carrack foundered on a voyage from Seville to the Antilles with the loss of all hands.

1571–1580

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1573

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  • (First report) John (  England): Wrecked on the Pole Sand at Exmouth, Devon with pilot John Parsons aboard. The Lympstone ship was heading for Exeter from Newfoundland with 70,000 salt fish (known as Newfoundland fish). The ship broke up and 18,000 fish were lost, to the value of £200 "... by his (the pilot) craft, fault, ignorance, rashness and negligence caused the ship to strike the sands and rocks of the sea".[11]
  • 17 April — Unnamed ship (Habsburg Netherlands): The unknown sloop-of-war may have been one of the ships sunk during the Battle of Flushing.[76]
  • April — (  Spain): During the Eighty Years' War a number of Spanish warships were lost in a battle with the Dutch fleet, when attempting to break a blockade on Middelburg.[76]

1578

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1579

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  • 29 October — Iveglia (  Spain): The three-masted carrack ran aground on reefs near Porto Pidocchio. Iveglia, carrying artillery and textiles, was stopped from entering the harbour at Camogli, Genoa because of an infectious disease in the port; some of the ship's crew were saved.[79]

1580

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1581–1590

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1583

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1584

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  • 26 January — Louvois Blanc The barque was lost on the French coast opposite Île de Ré.[85]
  • February — Trinidad (  Spain): The carrack (nau) was in poor condition and deliberately ran aground near Cape Virgenes, Argentina. Trinidad was one of a twenty-three strong expedition, led by Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, to colonise the Strait of Megellan. Items from the ship were used to equipe the colony of Nombre de Jesus, Argentina.[86]

1585

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1587

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1588

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July

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August

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September

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October

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Unknown date

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1589

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1589 or 1590

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  • Unknown date — Unidentified small galleon: Captured on the Spanish Main in the summer of 1589 by George Clifford, the Earl of Cumberland, and sent home as a "prize" the following winter. Under the command of Christopher Lister and with a cargo of looted silver, she was lost with all hands in a gale near Penzance, Cornwall.[129]

1591–1600

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1591

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Revenge

1592

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1593

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1594

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1595

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  • 17 July — Santa Magharita (  Spain): The galleon was lost off Florida.[147]
  • 2 August — John and two other ships (  England): Sank during a Spanish raid in Mount's Bay, Cornwall.[148]
  • 7 September — Santa Ysabel (  Spain): The galleon was the flagship of a fleet of four ships, led by Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira, in an attempt to colonise the Solomon Islands. Santa Ysabel disappeared while passing the erupting island of Tinakula, part of the Santa Cruz Islands.[149]
  • 23 November — Magdalena (  Spain): The frigate was lost during a battle against an English fleet attempting to capture San Juan de Puerto Rico.[150]
  • November — San Agustin (  Spain): The Spanish Manila galleon under the command of Portuguese Sebastião Rodrigues Soromenho (Sebastián Rodríguez Cermeño in Spanish) was lost at Drakes Bay, California, when a storm blew in from the south and the ship dragged anchor. Most of the crew was on land constructing a small boat for coastal exploration. The crew successfully returned to Mexico in the small boat.[151]
  • 19 December — San Felipe (  Spain): The galiot sank off the Philippines while returning to Spain from the Solomon Islands following a failed attempt to colonise those islands.[152]
  • 19 December — Santa Catalina (  Spain): The frigate sank off the Philippines while returning to Spain from the Solomon Islands following a failed attempt to colonise those islands.[153]

1596

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1597

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1598

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1600

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See also

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References

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  2. ^ Avec43. "SV Santa Maria del Antigua (+1502)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 2 August 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Lettens, Jan. "Miri (Mîrî) (+1502)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  4. ^ Nambiar O.K, The Kunjalis - Admirals of Calicut, Bombay, 1963.
  5. ^ Avec43. "SV San Antón (+1502)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 2 August 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Avec43. "Santa María de Gracia". Wrecksite. Retrieved 2 August 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  17. ^ Google translation to English, October 26, 2016, "Daniel Guillen and Hernando de Magallanes" Original
  18. ^ Google Translate to English, October 26, 2016, "Daniel Guillen's Magellan," Original
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  110. ^ Avec43. "Ciervo Volante". Wrecksite. Retrieved 19 October 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  112. ^ Avec43. "Concepción de Juanes del Cano (+1588)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 23 October 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  160. ^ 宣祖實錄 宣祖三十一年 十一月二十四日 (The Annals of King Seonjo, 19 November 1598 in Lunar Calendar) "賊船一百隻捕捉, 二百隻燒破, 斬首五百級, 生擒一百八十餘名。 溺死者, 時未浮出, 故不知其數 (Our army captured 100 enemy ships, destroyed 200 ships, beheaded 500 enemy soldiars, and caught 180-plus soldiars alive. The number of drowned enemy soldiars is unknown, because they have still sunk)".
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