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The Mary Rose - The Mary Rose Discover the Mary Rose Explore Henry VIII’s favourite ship and the largest collection of Tudor objects in the world Prices frozen – book now!
Raising the Mary Rose The Mary Rose was raised on 11 th October 1982, following many years of searching, excavation, and recording Henry VIII’s ship was finally returning home to Portsmouth Dockyard, where she had been built almost 500 years earlier
Archaeology - The Mary Rose Archaeologists from the Mary Rose Trust have been instrumental in leading research projects including experimental archaeology Recreating activities such cooking on a replica of the Mary Rose galley, or using Tudor techniques to reproduce elements of structure found on the ship, or manufacturing and testing copies of the weapons recovered
The life of the - The Mary Rose The Mary Rose was in service for 34 years before she sank in 1545 Delve into her service history and her role into Henry VIII's Navy
Artefacts - The Mary Rose Discover a selection of the 19,000 original Tudor objects recovered from the Mary Rose wreck site
Why did the Mary Rose sink? The Mary Rose sank on 19th July 1545, but there could be several reasons why Henry VIII's favourite ship was lost
Recovery 1545 - The Mary Rose After the Mary Rose sank in 1545, efforts were made by the court of Henry VIII to recover the King's favourite ship
Museum highlights - The Mary Rose Dive into the untold story of the finding, excavation, and recovery of the Mary Rose in our new multi-sensory 4D cinema, narrated by Ross Kemp Hear stories of the people who dived on the ship, from the Tudor divers of 1545, to the 20th-century search pioneered by Alexander McKee and his team of volunteers, as well as the ground-breaking
Discover - The Mary Rose Discover the Mary Rose’s history, from the Tudor era through to today Peek through our collections in the Artefact Gallery, gain an understanding of maritime conservation, and learn about our research and archaeology
19th century salvage - The Mary Rose Following the failed attempts of the Tudor salvage divers to recover the Mary Rose, the ship was abandoned and eventually became lost However, in June 1836 fishermen from Gosport reported snagging their nets on ‘something’ on the seabed of the Solent