- Aug 19, 2014
- 38,556
- 141,074
- Detector(s) used
- JW 8X-ML X2-VP 585
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Excellent clarification. I can't remember if I transcribed that date from somewhere else or it was just a mistake on my part. Either way, it's a significant misprint and I'm glad you made a point to correct it.
It was Laudonniere who returned in 1564 with 3 ships and founded Fort Caroline. Ribault did not return until 1565 with a relief expedition of 7 ships.
Bennett, Charles E. Laudonniere & Fort Caroline: History and Documents, 2001.
I believe 1564 may have been referenced in this thread as the date when Laudonniere returned and found the natives worshipping the monument placed at the May River in 1562.
At the remark of how inappropriate it was for me to ask others on the forum to share the source documenting 5 additional monuments, I decided to add my credit card information to PACER and search on my own. Unfortunately, the PACER system is organized in a way that makes searching for such information a fairly time consuming task, so I'm still going through it. Once [or if] I find it though, I will be sure to share it.
...These monuments were intended to mark formally la Floride as territory of France and "only a royal ship would have been given the charge of transporting an object so closely linked to the king's power as that of a landmark bearing the arms of France." (LeLuc Decl. at pp 18-20). ...[/I]
Little more info...
Case: 6:16-cv-01742-KRS; Document: 75-16; Filed: 09/26/17; Page: 20 of 22; Page ID: 851
A January 19, 1566 letter to King Philip II by Don Frances de Alva, the Spanish Ambassador to King Charles IX of France, reports that the French Court had received word that the Ribault Fleet had been lost. The 11 page de Alva letter, written in code, recounts dismay at the Court of Charles IX at the fact that six territorial markers had been on board and lost with the Ribault Fleet. The passage concerning the marble columns, decoded on the margin of the page, states:
Of the captain [Ribault] who went from Bordeaux in the small ship of which I have written your majesty, to Florida, it is also understood here that a Spanish ship sent it to the bottom and they felt this keenly because it carried six marble columns with the arms of this king and many epitaphs to put them in the fort of la Florida.
(Exhibit 9, de Alava letter)
I also found it interesting that the de Alva letter states the ship with the six monuments on it was sent to the bottom by a Spanish ship. Still a lot of documents to get through, yet.
I found a document today that says some of the cannons were salvaged by a group of survivors that built a fort. The Spanish burned the fort and buried these cannons. I believe I also read somewhere here that most of the cannons brought in 1565 were intended for use on land and were being used as ballasts in the ships that sank.
Case: 6:16-cv-01742-KRS; Document: 81-4; Filed: 12/04/17; Page: 20 of 21; Page ID: 1186
The Adelantado received these people very well and gave them very good treatment: he set fire to the fort, which was of wood, and destroyed it; and he burned the ship which was being built, and buried the artillery, as the boats could not carry it because they were small.
I wonder if any of the documents/letters were forged or added to after the State of Florida notified France after GME filed for a salvage permit and or arrest of the shipwreck. Sorry but I don't trust the French any further than I can throw them as they got us into the Vietnam War and then bailed on us, they kicked U.S. Troops out of France in 1967 after we demanded some repayment of War debts for what the U.S. spent on rebuilding many cities in France and especially Paris and also because they treated us (myself and fellow soldiers from my' Unit) like dirt when we spent nearly a week in Paris on Leave. Paris is a nasty city with nasty people!
Bull Shiite!! If a factual not made up document can show that the monument found by GME was not on the Trinite and in turn proves that the ship is not the Trinite, then it has a lot of bearing on the decision.
Highly doubtful, in my opinion. I think the only plausible related scenario is if they purposefully omitted the translation of the rest of Alva's letter because it included context to suggest the ship carrying the monuments was not the Trinite. I haven't read all the case documents yet, but I believe I exhausted all those to include evidence of additional monuments being onboard the Trinite. If my memory serves correct, the most conclusive court document presented (that I was trying to find) was from the Spanish archives documenting a French survivors account of there being additional monuments onboard [one or more of] the wrecked ships. I would interpret the Alva letter to be such, but it would be great if the entire letter was translated.