Sought after by
treasure hunters for more than 300 years, the wreck of the Spanish galleon San
José has finally been discovered, according to Colombian President Juan Manuel
Santos. The shipwreck—which could contain as much as $17 billion in gold,
silver and jewels—might be the richest in the world, but it is also the subject
of a decades-long legal battle.
As sunlight waned over
the coast of Colombia on June 8, 1708, José Fernández de Santillán cursed the
listless wind. The Spanish admiral knew the safe refuge of Cartagena was only
16 miles away, but the absence of any breeze had turned his sprint for safety
into an interminable slog. With Santillán’s lookouts reporting that the
pursuing British warships were closing in on his lumbering galleon, San José,
the admiral had no choice but to order his men to prepare for battle.
At stake was nothing
less than the balance of power in Europe. In addition to the 600 men aboard San
José, the vessel contained a cache of gold, silver and jewels so bounteous that
its value exceeded Spain’s annual income. The riches promised a badly needed
monetary infusion for Spain and its French allies who for seven years had been
embroiled in war with a coalition of British, German, Austrian, Portuguese and
Dutch forces following the anointing of French King Louis XIV’s grandson as
Spanish monarch. Knowing that the safe transport of the treasure mined by slave
labor in Spain’s South American colonies could alter the course of the War of
the Spanish Succession, British Commodore Charles Wager chased down San José and
its 17-vessel treasure fleet in spite of having only four ships himself.
Artifacts found in the
wreckage of Spanish galleon San Jose. (Credit: Colombian Ministry of Culture)
Wager drew so close to
San José that he could hear the voices of the galleon’s 600-man crew. Shortly
after sunset, fiery cannon blasts lit up the night as broadsides of chains,
scrap iron and cannonballs snapped the planks of the ships like matchsticks. On
such a stagnant night, the smells of sulfur and brimstone lingered with a
blanket of thick smoke that enveloped the combatants. Crews furiously dumped
sand on their decks to soak up the slippery pools of blood impeding traction.
Then suddenly, Wager
heard a tremendous explosion, felt a blast of heat and shielded himself from a
shower of burning timbers. As the commodore peered through the curtain of
smoke, he could no longer see his opponent. Gunpowder aboard the Spanish
galleon had apparently ignited, and all but 11 of San José’s men went down with
the ship along with millions of gold and silver coins and a bounty of jewels.
For more than three
centuries, the riches resting on the floor of the Caribbean Sea have tantalized
treasure hunters, and on Saturday, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos
announced that the wreck of San José had finally been found. After breaking the
news on Twitter, the president said at a subsequent news conference in
Cartagena that an international team of experts working with Colombia’s
Institute of Anthropology and History discovered San José under approximately
800 feet of water on November 27.
Colombia’s President
Juan Manuel Santos during a press conference announcing the discovery of the
remains of the galleon San Jose. (Credit: Colombian Ministry of Culture)
“I am very pleased, as
head of state, to inform you that, without a doubt, we have found, 307 years
after its sinking, the galleon San José,” Santos said, according to NPR. A
short video that was played at the press conference showed the launch of one of
the autonomous underwater vehicles that were used along with sonar and special
cameras to locate the wreck, and photographs supplied by the Colombian
government showed what appear to be ceramic and porcelain vases, cannons and
bottles on the seabed. The government said the identification of well-preserved
bronze cannons stamped with dolphins helped to definitively identify the
wreckage as that of San José, and it added an intriguing note that “the
collected evidence points to the conclusion that the ship did not explode, as
stated in most history books.”
According to NPR,
Santos called the discovery “one of the biggest findings and identifications of
underwater heritage in the history of humanity.” NPR reports that the value of
the treasure has been estimated at between $4 billion and $17 billion.
Artifacts found in the
wreckage of Spanish galleon San Jose. (Credit: Colombian Ministry of Culture)
Just as it was three
centuries ago, the possession of the treasure remains a point of international
contention, except that lawyers instead of warships are now waging the battle.
Sea Search Armada (SSA), a salvage company based in the United States, claimed
to have located San José in 1981. CNN reports that the company negotiated with
the Colombian government to receive 35 percent of the ship’s treasure if
recovered but then Colombia subsequently claimed all rights to the riches and
was willing to provide SSA with only a 5 percent finder’s fee. The company sued
in a United States court, but the case was dismissed in 2011.
The Colombian
government affirmed that the ship had been found in a location that had not
been referenced in previous searches, but Jack Harbeston, SSA’s managing
director, disputed the notion in an interview with the Huffington Post. “If, as
the [Colombian government] claims, there is nothing at the sites disclosed to
it by SSA, why wouldn’t it let us visit the sites? If we visited our sites and
found nothing then the game was over for SSA; we would fold our tent and
leave,” he said.
The American company may
not be the only entity staking a claim on the treasure. According to the
Guardian newspaper, Spanish Culture Secretary José María Lasalle said his
country was waiting to examine information from Colombia before deciding “what
action to take in defense of what we consider to be our sunken wealth and in
accordance with UNESCO agreements that our country signed up to years ago.”
Santos made no mention
of competing claims in his news conference on Saturday, and, to protect the
wreck from looting, he did not disclose its location. The Colombian president
said that a museum will be built in Cartagena to house relics recovered from
the wreck, but that process will likely take years.
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