An 800-Year-Old Made in China Label Reveals Shipwreck History

A ceramic base with 'Made in China'

This is a ceramic box base from the Java Sea shipwreck with a Chinese inscription that mentions a place, Jianning Fu, that dates from A.D. 1162-1278. (Image: Gedi Jakovickas via The Field Museum)

Centuries ago, a ship sank in the Java Sea off the coast of Indonesia. The wooden hull of the shipwreck disintegrated over time, leaving only a treasure trove of cargo. The ship had been carrying thousands of ceramics and luxury goods for trade, and they remained on the ocean floor until the 1980s when the wreck was discovered by fishermen.

In the years since, archaeologists have been studying artifacts retrieved from the shipwreck to piece together where the ship was from and when it departed. The equivalent of a “Made in China” label on a piece of pottery helped archaeologists reevaluate when the ship went down and how it fits in with China’s history.

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Lisa Niziolek, an archaeologist at the Field Museum in Chicago and lead author of the study in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, said:

The ship was carrying ceramics marked with an inscription that might indicate they were made in Jianning Fu, a government district in China. But after the invasion of the Mongols around 1278, the area was reclassified as Jianning Lu.

Chinese ceramic bowls in situ at the Java Sea Shipwreck site.
Chinese ceramic bowls in situ at the Java Sea shipwreck site. (Image: Pacific Sea Resources via The Field Museum)

The slight change in the name tipped Niziolek and her colleagues off that the shipwreck may have occurred earlier than the late 1200s, as early as 1162. Niziolek notes that the likelihood of a ship in the later “Jianning Lu” days carrying old pottery with the outdated name is slim:

Plus, ceramics weren’t the only cargo onboard. The ship was also carrying elephant tusks for use in medicine or art and sweet-smelling resin for use in incense or for caulking ships. Both of these materials were critical to re-dating the wreck.

The resins and the tusks come from living things, and all living things contain carbon. A type of carbon atom called C-14 is unstable and decays relatively steadily over time.

Scientists can use the amount of C-14 in a sample to determine how old it is. This analysis, known as radiocarbon dating, had been done decades ago and pointed to the shipwreck being about 700-750 years old.

This is a ceramic box base from the Java Sea Shipwreck, with a Chinese inscription that mentions a place, Jianning Fu, that dates from AD 1162 to 1278.
This is a ceramic box base from the Java Sea shipwreck, with a Chinese inscription that mentions a place, Jianning Fu, that dates from A.D. 1162-1278. (Image: Gedi Jakovickas via The Field Museum)

Shipwreck older than previously thought

However, analytical techniques have improved, and the scientists wanted to see if the date held. The amount of decayed carbon found in the resins and tusks revealed that the cargo was older than previously thought.

When taken together with the place name inscribed on the ceramics, stylistic analysis of ceramics from known time periods, and input from experts overseas, the researchers concluded that the shipwreck was indeed older than previously thought — somewhere in the neighborhood of 800 years old.

The fact that the Java Sea shipwreck happened 800 years ago instead of 700 years ago is a big deal for archaeologists. Niziolek added:

Niziolek also notes the importance of the Java Sea shipwreck collection.

Provided by: Field Museum [Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.]

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