Posted on 20.11.2012 and completed on 06.11.2013
On 10 August 1628, Vasa, the first in a series of five warships which aimed to had to end a series of defeats suffered by Swedish fleet and to make this country the dominant maritime power of the Baltic Sea, left the port of Stockholm in its maiden voyage. To mark the solemnity of the occasion, several volleys were fired by the cannons placed on the two decks, on both sides. While the majestic ship headed slowly towards the exit of the harbor, a gust of wind tilted it on its side. After redressed it, another gust tilted it again. The water entered through the open cannons ports, and Vasa sank, taking with it in depths between 30 and 50 of the 150 crew members. The ship sailed just 1300 meters and it was at only 120 meters of the shore full of people came to attend the event, including foreign ambassadors.
The news of the sinking reached the Swedish king Gustavus Adolphus, who led the army in Prussia, after two weeks. Obviously, the disaster had to be the result of "foolishness and incompetence," and the guilty must be punished. Of course that anyone didn't take into account the impatience of the king to see the ship joining the Baltic fleet in the Thirty Years' War, reason why the subordinates didn't have the courage to discuss frankly the ship's structural problems. The leaders of the inquest concluded that the ballast was insufficient in relation to the rig and cannon, and the ship was well built, but incorrectly proportioned. So in the end no one was punished for the fiasco.
Most of its 64 bronze cannon were recovered in the 17th century, but the ship was salvaged, with a largely intact hull, only in 1961. First it was housed in a temporary museum called Wasavarvet (The Wasa Shipyard), and in 1987 was moved to the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, located on the island of Djurgården. The museum is dominated by a large copper roof with stylized masts that represent the actual height of Vasa when she was fully rigged. The main hall contains the ship itself and various exhibits related to the archaeological findings of the ships and early 17th century Sweden, which means 2,000 objects, a small part of the museum collection, comprising 46,000 objects. Although its career wasn't meritorious, Vasa is considered a symbol of the Swedish "great power period".
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