القسم التعليمي (عودة إلى الصفحة الرئيسية)

المستوى المتوسط

Information



Information

The Jewel of Muscat, built on the beach at Qantab, Oman, is a reconstruction of a ship that was wrecked near the island of Belitung off the coast of Indonesia. The ship was carrying a cargo of Tang Treasure (60,000 pieces of rare Chinese porcelain), coins, gold and silver vessels and lead ingots for ballast. The ship is believed to have sailed from Arabia to China and then was heading back to Malaysia, India or Arabia with its precious cargo when it was wrecked.

On these early voyages some ships left from Oman and sailed across the Sea of Oman and Arabian Sea to India. From there they would cross the Bay of Bengal and sail between the Malay Peninsula and the island of Sumatra to Singapore or sail north to Vietnam. Some ships would then sail on to China.

This sea route was used by traders as early as the 8th century. At the time it was the longest sea-trading route in the world.

The Jewel of Muscat is named after Muscat, the capital of Oman. The completed ship sails into the Oman Sea, down through the Arabian Sea, along the western coast of India, around Sri Lanka then across the Bay of Bengal and through the Straits of Malacca to Singapore. In Singapore it will be part of a new museum.

To reconstruct accurately a 9th-century ship, the Jewel of Muscat team had to search the world for the right materials.

Watch the video that shows where the wood for the keel has come from.

Watch the video that shows where the wood for the masts has come from.

And, of course, the people who build the ship are very important too.

Watch the video to see what the Omani workers think about the Jewel of Muscat project.