MessageToEagle.com

Menu
  • Home
  • All Science
  • Astronomy
  • Physics
  • Earth
     
  • Technology
  • Ancient World

Ancient Disc-Shaped Copper Ingots Found In Shipwreck At Bulgaria’s Sea Coast

MessageToEagle.com | April 28, 2020 | Archaeology News | No Comments

Conny Waters – MessageToEagle.com – A set of ancient copper ingots shaped as discs have been found in a shipwreck near a Black Sea cape in Southeast Bulgaria.

The disc-shaped copper ingots found in a Late Bronze Age shipwreck are seen here, with a photo of Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos cape in the background.

The disc-shaped copper ingots found in a Late Bronze Age shipwreck are seen here, with a photo of Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos cape in the background. Photo: Burgas Regional Museum of History

The discovery sheds light on the maritime trade of the Ancient Thracians during the Late Bronze Age (second half of the 2nd millennium BC).

The artifacts are similar to those recovered from two famous ancient shipwrecks found on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey, at Gelidonya and Uluburun.

The disc-like Late Bronze Age copper ingots in question have been discovered inside a Late Bronze Age shipwreck near Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos, i.e. “Oily Cape”, alongside with other artifacts.

According to Archaeology in Bulgaria, the Late Bronze Age copper ingots were part of the load carried by an ancient ship whose wreck has been found near Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos cape, close to the town of Primorsko, Burgas District.

The ancient copper ingots in question differ from Bronze Age copper ingots discovered in Bulgaria’s interior, and, instead, are similar to copper ingots discovered in far more famous shipwrecks on the coast of Southern Anatolia, Turkey, at the Gelidonya Cape and the Uluburun Cape.

Map of location of bronze ingotsA map showing the locations of the Uluburun and Gelidonya shipwrecks in Turkey and the Maslen Nos shipwreck in Bulgaria – disc-shaped Late Bronze Age copper ingots have been discovered at all three places. Map: BAS Library 

The Gelidonya shipwreck is that of a Late Bronze Age (from ca. 1,200 BC) ship from Mycenae. It was located at a depth of 27 meters (89 feet) in 1954 and started to be excavated in 1960. In addition to disc-shaped copper ingots, the Mycenaean shipwreck at Turkey’s Gelidonya Cape also contained tin ingots, merchant weights, and Mycenaean pottery.

The Uluburun Cape shipwreck, also on Turkey’s southern, Mediterranean coast, also dates back to the Late Bronze Age, more specifically, the 14th century BC.

It was discovered in 1982 of between 8 and 17 meters (26 – 56 feet), and was explored between 1984 and 1994.

The disc-like copper ingots found in the Late Bronze Age shipwreck at Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos

The disc-like copper ingots found in the Late Bronze Age shipwreck at Bulgaria’s Maslen Nos cape. Photo: Burgas Regional Museum of History

The discovery and characteristics of the disc-like Late Bronze Age copper ingots found on Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast at Maslen Nos were presented in Bulgaria’s Burgas by archaeologist Miroslav Klasnakov in February 2020.

“Analogous to similar finds from explored shipwrecks at the capes of Gelidonya and Uluburun in Turkey, the “copper cakes” from the Bulgarian Black Sea coast are also dated to the Late Bronze Age,” archaeologist Miroslav Klasnakov said.

“Unlike the ingots [of the same period], which are shaped like a stretched-out ox skin, found in [the interior] of today’s Bulgaria, however, relatively far to the west of the sea coast, these ones [from Maslen Nos] have a disc-like shape, and are found only beneath the water.”

The ancient copper ingots found at Maslen Nos shed light on the maritime trade contacts between the Ancient Thracian tribes, which inhabited the region of the Strandzha Mountain in today’s Southeast Bulgaria and Northeast European Turkey.

At the same time, the artifacts offer insights into the mining of metals and metallurgy in the Strandzha Mountain during the Late Bronze Age.

Written by Conny Waters – MessageToEagle.com – AncientPages.com Staff Writer

Related Posts

  • A view of the mill in Denizli, western Turkey 4,000-Year-Old Textile Mill Discovered At Beycesultan Mound In Western Turkey
    No Comments | Sep 25, 2020
  • Controversial Discovery Of Two Skeletons Suggests Ancient Chinese Visited London During The Roman Empire Controversial Discovery Of Skeletons Suggests Ancient Chinese Visited London During The Roman Empire
    No Comments | Sep 27, 2016
  • Image credit: Hermann et al./Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory Bronze Age Swords Were Used By Skilled Fighters – New Study
    No Comments | Apr 29, 2020
  • Ancient Greek Knossos coin depicts 400 BCE Labyrinth 2000-Year-Old Labyrinth Square Discovered In India – Its Pattern Is Identical To Seen On Greek Pylos Tablets
    No Comments | Aug 8, 2015
  • Lost Maya City Hidden In The Volcanic Lake Atitlán Explored By Underwater Archaeologists Lost Maya City Hidden In The Volcanic Lake Atitlán Explored By Underwater Archaeologists
    No Comments | May 4, 2022
  • Anatolia's Seyitömer Mound Was Inhabited In Bronze Age, Achaemenid, Hellenistic, And Roman Times Anatolia’s Seyitömer Mound Was Inhabited In Bronze Age, Achaemenid, Hellenistic, And Roman Times
    No Comments | Aug 17, 2020
  • Silver Needle Dismissed As Trash Was A Part Of A Stunning Viking Treasure Found By Farmer On Gotland Silver Needle Dismissed As Trash Was Part Of A Stunning Viking Treasure Found By Farmer On Gotland
    No Comments | Nov 17, 2020
  • A 1,600-year-old mosaic on display in Yavne A 1,600-Year-Old Mosaic Accidentally Unearthed In Ancient City Of Yavne, Israel
    No Comments | Apr 27, 2021
  • Jerusalem artifacts Archaeologists Discover Jerusalem Is Much Older Than Previously Thought
    No Comments | Feb 18, 2016
  • 12,000-Year-Old Crater Dipsiz ('Bottomless') Lake, Searched For Gold, And Destroyed In Legal But Controversial Excavation 12,000-Year-Old Crater Dipsiz (‘Bottomless’) Lake, Searched For Gold, And Destroyed In Legal But Controversial Excavation
    No Comments | Nov 18, 2019

Follow Us

On This Day In History: Vespasian Was Elected The Roman Emperor – On July 1, 69 A.D.

On This Day In History: Vespasian Was Elected The Roman Emperor – On July 1, 69 A.D.

Latest From Message To Eagle

  • NASA’s New Horizons Spacecraft Observe Interstellar Material Slowing The Solar Wind
  • Highly Unusual Quantum States Known As “Frac­tional Fermi Seas” Can Be Quantum-Engi­neered
  • ‘Candy Floss’ Planets Among Lightest Ever Found
  • Plankton Decline Across North East Atlantic – Stark Warning For Ocean Health
  • Astronomers Have Discovered Salty Skies Surrounding The Famous “Pink Planet”
  • Asteroid Assault Made Ancient Earth Too Hot And Chaotic For Continents To Form
  • A Powerful Earthquake In Kamchatka Caused A Rupture That Extends Into The Area Affected By The 1952 Event
  • Scientists Have Now Precisely Dated The Oldest Known Asteroid Impact On Earth To 3 Billion Years Ago

Library of Ancient & Unexplained Mysteries

Library of Ancient & Unexplained Mysteries

Latest Archaeology News

Latest Archaeology News

Recommended books:

NASA’s New Horizons Spacecraft Observe Interstellar Material Slowing The Solar Wind

NASA’s New Horizons Spacecraft Observe Interstellar Material Slowing The Solar Wind

Highly Unusual Quantum States Known As “Frac­tional Fermi Seas” Can Be Quantum-Engi­neered

Highly Unusual Quantum States Known As “Frac­tional Fermi Seas” Can Be Quantum-Engi­neered

‘Candy Floss’ Planets Among Lightest Ever Found

‘Candy Floss’ Planets Among Lightest Ever Found

Plankton Decline Across North East Atlantic - Stark Warning For Ocean Health

Plankton Decline Across North East Atlantic – Stark Warning For Ocean Health

Astronomers Have Discovered Salty Skies Surrounding The Famous “Pink Planet”

Astronomers Have Discovered Salty Skies Surrounding The Famous “Pink Planet”

Asteroid Assault Made Ancient Earth Too Hot And Chaotic For Continents To Form

Asteroid Assault Made Ancient Earth Too Hot And Chaotic For Continents To Form

© 2026 MessageToEagle.com.
  • Privacy And Cookies Policy