Cultural authorities in south China's Guangdong Province said
yesterday that none of the relics recovered from the wreck of the
ancient Nanhai I had been put up for sale overseas.
Jing Lihu, deputy director of the Guangdong provincial cultural
department, said: "All of the relics salvaged from the ship belong
to the national treasure and no one has the right to do so (sell
them)."
The Nanhai I, which was a serendipitous find in 1987 in the seas
around Yangjiang in Guangdong, is the largest cargo ship of the
Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) so far discovered on the ancient
"Marine Silk Road" of the South China Sea.
A host of green-glazed porcelain plates, tin pots, shadow-blue
china and other rare items were found during an initial exploration
of the ship.
Archaeologists have said there could be 60,000-80,000 relics on
the ship, which some cultural experts have estimated to be worth
about US$100 billion.
"We have established a sound management system for protecting
the relics salvaged from the ship. And so far we have no record of
any public sales," Jing said in an interview with China
Daily yesterday.
Recent reports by some Chinese media claimed that a relic from
the Nanhai I had been put up for auction in Europe with a reserve
price of about US$1 million.
"That was a false report, which did not give any information
about when or where the auction took place," Jing said.
Huang Daoqing, director of the Guangdong provincial archaeology
research institute, said: "National treasures are not allowed to be
put up for public sale, and so far all of the relics recovered from
the ship have been properly protected."
He added that it was hard to estimate the total value of the
antiquities, as "many have yet to be recovered".
Salvage work on the wreckage site was able to resume yesterday
thanks to improved weather conditions in the seas off Yangjiang,
sources with the Guangzhou salvage bureau under the Ministry of
Communications, said.
A massive "steel box" to be used to help lift the ancient ship
was put into place last Thursday, but bad weather led to work being
suspended.
Wang Wenyi, an official in charge of the salvage operation,
said: "The ancient ship (once it is has been recovered) will be put
in a huge glass pool, in which the water temperature, pressure and
other environmental conditions will replicate the sea in which it
has spent the past 800 years."
He said the salvage operation was expected to be completed
before July, weather permitting.
(China Daily May 24, 2007)