‘The biggest treasure in the history of humanity’: The holy grail of shipwrecks claimed

A nation has locked away a shipwreck, rumoured to hold billions in treasure, as a legal and cultural battle over ownership rages on.

A long-lost shipwreck with stash of gold on board thought to be worth billions of dollars has been suspiciously locked away in the name of “protecting heritage”.

Colombia declared a “protected archaeological area” on Wednesday around the spot where a Spanish galleon sank off its Caribbean coast more than three centuries ago, with her hull laden with gold, silver and emeralds.

Colombia declared a “protected archaeological area” around a sunken Spanish galleon, San José, laden with gold, silver, and emeralds. Picture: AFP
The treasure-laden galleon has been a subject of dispute and claims by various parties. Picture: AFP

The designation “guarantees the protection of heritage” through the ship’s “long-term preservation and the development of research, conservation and valuation activities” according to the nation’s culture ministry.

The San José was owned by the Spanish crown when she was sunk by the British navy near Cartagena in 1708. Only a handful of her 600-strong crew survived.

Action off Cartagena, 28 May 1708. San José sank off Colombia’s Caribbean coast more than three centuries ago.

The galleon had been heading back from the New World (the Modern-day Americas) to the court of King Philip V of Spain, bearing chests of emeralds and some 11 million gold and silver coins.

San José and her treasure have sat 600 metres deep ever since with the location a closely-guarded state secret.

Colombia officially announced the discovery in 2015, but adventurers had long sought her before that.

The value of the treasure is estimated to be worth billions of dollars. Picture: AFP

The value of her bounty has been estimated to run into the billions, even tens of billions of dollars.

Still, despite this, Culture Minister Juan David Correa insisted this week: “This is not a treasure. We do not treat it as such.”

He announced the area’s new designation at an event launching the first “non-intrusive” phase of a scientific exploration of the wreck.

San José’s contentious spoils

Columbian President Gustavo Petro has insisted on raising the wreck for purposes of science and culture, but many still vehemently claim her invaluable contents.

Spain had laid claim to the ship and her contents under a UN convention Colombia was not party to.

Indigenous Qhara Qhara Bolivians claim the riches were stolen from them by the Spanish, who forced them to mine the precious metals.

Bolivia’s Indigenous people have expressed a concession of sorts, stating they are willing to work with Columbia in return for only a few pieces from the San José.

“Not only for the symbolic issue but more for the spiritual issue,” Qhara Qhara leader Samuel Flores told AFP in 2023.

“We just want our ancestors to be at peace.”

The wreck is also claimed by US-based salvage company Sea Search Armada, which insists it found her first more than 40 years ago and has taken Colombia to the UN’s Permanent Court of Arbitration, seeking $10 billion.

According to a Colombian government filing, the San José carried “the biggest treasure in the history of humanity.”

Sea Search Armada claims it discovered the wreck in 1981 and estimates the value of her bounty to be between $4 billion to $20 billion.

The salvager asserts it handed over the coordinates of the wreck to Colombia under an agreement for a 50 per cent share.

Source: https://www.news.com.au/technology/science/archaeology/the-biggest-treasure-in-the-history-of-humanity-the-holy-grail-of-shipwrecks-claimed/news-story/683ef440bcdbee7a260412f8c10c472e

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