Divers
have recently been investigation the seabed off the coast of Lebanon , more precisely just south of Tyre , the
city Alexander besieged in 332 BC.
So
far, eleven shipwrecks were explored, and they yielded a wide array of broken
pottery and piles of stones.
[Picture from Archaeology News Network]
Credit: Lebanon
Divers Syndicate, HO
Although
archaeologists recognize the link of these wrecks with Alexander, they don’t seem to agree on the role these ships played
in the actual siege of Tyre. The remains have been found some 700 meters from the beach.
The
stones were probably lost on their route to the causeway Alexander was building to link the fortified island of Tyre
to the old city on the mainland. The ships may have sunk during severe storms
or simply because they were overloaded. Piles of such stones were found 50 to 200 meters apart.
As to
the pots, it has been suggested that they all broke after a violent collision of
the ships since none were recovered intact. A close study of these shards
indicates that they are probably from Greek origin.
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