Film Guide: Ancient Mariners
Film Guide: Ancient Mariners
Film Guide: Ancient Mariners
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As the Yassi Ada ship was being prepared for her last voyage, a
procession of porters would have carried aboard the cargo of nine-
hundred-odd amphoras and passed them down through the hatch
into the hold. Most of the storage jars were large and globular, but
some were smaller and more elongated. The large jars could hold as
much as forty liters of liquid, the small large jars held wine; unfor-
tunately, the mud contents of none of the smaller amphoras were
sieved at the time of excavation.
The cook’s stores would have been loaded at the same time as the
cargo. We know that his fresh rations included a basketful of dark,
gleaming mussels: Their empty shells, carefully nested within one
another, were found amid the wreckage.
of the purse or purses were the ship’s victualing money. With port
and customs taxes already paid, there would have been no need to
risk more cash at sea.
The ship probably sailed south from the northern Aegean Sea,
from the Black Sea, or perhaps from Constantinople (now Istanbul).
All but one of the coins were minted north of Yassi Ada, and most
of the pottery on board also came from the north. And the ship
was almost certainly sailing before the prevailing meltem wind, in a
southeasterly direction.
The helmsman may have steered a course that would keep him as
near the small, flat island of Yassi Ada as he felt was safe. Whitecaps
may have camouflaged the breakers over a reef to the west of the
island, so that the helmsman did not see danger. As soon as he felt
the bottom hit, he must have steered for the island. But the ship
foundered in deep water less than a hundred yards offshore. Planing
this way and that, like a falling leaf, it silently drifted downward. It
landed on an even keel, still pointing toward the island, and then
listed to port. We do not know if George and his crew escaped.