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*Sea Monster* Figurehead Hauled from the Baltic Sea



~!!~The *monster* — a ship figurehead that may show a scowling dog or perhaps a fantastical sea dragon with a helpless human clutched in its jaws — was fixed atop the Gribshunden, a vessel that last sailed in 1495// *I think it's some kind of fantasy animal — a dragon with lion ears and crocodilelike mouth,* Johan Ronnby, a professor of marine archaeology at Södertörn University in Sweden, who recovered the figurehead, told BBC News//*And there seems to be something in his mouth// There seems to be a person in its mouth, and he's eating somebody//'' [See Images of the *Grip Dog* Ship's Monstrous Figurehead]

~!!~The sunken ship could provide an unprecedented look at how warships were made at that pivotal time in world history// *What is unique is that there are no other warships from this time in the world,* said Marcus Sandekjer, the director of the Blekinge Museum in Karlskrona, Sweden, where the figurehead is being kept// The Gribshunden, or the *Grip Dog,* could even provide clues to the construction of the ships that Christopher Columbus used to sail to North America, he added// 

~!!~The team isn't quite sure what a *grip dog* is// In Danish, *Gribshunden* is a combination of the words for a griffon — a mythical Greek creature that is part lion, part bird — and a dog or hound// *It's an odd name also in Danish,* Sandekjer told Live Science Either way, the Gribshunden was the flagship of King Hans of Denmark's naval fleet// In 1495, the king was sailing on the Gribshunden to the southeastern Swedish city of Kalmar, where he planned to negotiate a political union between the Scandinavian countries// But partway through the journey, while King Hans was off the boat visiting the nearby port of Ronneby in what is now Sweden (then Denmark), the Gribshunden caught fire and sank// An eyewitness account from a Danish nobleman who escaped the wreckage describes a terrible conflagration in which *many knights and poor men burned to death,* Sandekjer said//

 ~!!~Divers first discovered the wreck in the 1970s, but scientists identified the ship in 2013, only after two excavations in 2007 and 2011 to analyze the wood// Earlier this week (Aug// 11), divers managed to heave the monstrous figurehead from the frigid waters// It is now sitting in a bath of water at the Blekinge Museum// Researchers hope to restore it and then put it on display at the museum// 

~!!~The forbidding face of the Gribshunden likely would have struck fear in enemies who encountered it/ From nose to end, it spans 11//1 feet (3//4 meters)// It would have been the terrifying face of an imposing warship that was up to 100 feet (30 m) long and held 150 seamen//

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