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Documents published from the Vatican archives in 2014 revealed an incredible tale of pirate attacks and corruption involving a 14th century bishop, whose lifelong accumulation of treasure was accosted by pirates on the way to Avignon, France, where Pope Innocent VI was based. One of the pirate ships ran aground and the pirates as well as a portion of the treasure was captured. ..
Following the death of de Castillon in 1357 AD, a ship named the São Vicente, laden with de Castillon’s lifelong accumulation of treasures, including gold, silver, rings, tapestries, jewels, fine plates and altars, set sail from Lisboa (modern-day Lisbon) in Portugal, to Avignon in France. Pope Innocent VI (reign 1352-1362) was based in Avignon due to political turmoil in Italy at the time...
The São Vicente was attacked by two pirate ships while sailing near the town of Cartagena, in modern-day Spain. One of the ships was captained by a pirate named Botafoc (“fire blast”), while the other was commanded by Martin Yanes...
The crew of the São Vicente had little choice but to surrender de Castillon’s treasure to the two pirate ships. While the ship led by Martin Yanes appears to have made a clean getaway with a bounty of treasure. Botafoc’s ship ran aground near the town of Aigues-Mortes in France, and the pirates were captured by the local garrison. The crew was quickly hanged, while Botafoc and a few of his officers were sent to prison to await their fate...
Here is the link for more about that.
The Extraordinary Tale of a Pope, a Pirate, and a Dead Bishop’s Treasure | Ancient Origins
These pirates were well-armed indeed. The pirate Martin Yanes (or Martinus Johannes) of Sevilla and Antonio "Botafoc" of Genoa (Botafoc meaning "fire blast" — via Live Science) were not deterred by exclamations of "spolia" and the invocation of Pope Innocent VI's name.
The pirates Martinus Johannes (of Sevilla) and Botafoc (of Genoa) presumably took the São Vicente for all that it was worth and thus procured the spoils of the bishopric. From surviving accounts in Vatican records, Martinus Johannes is not heard from again after this point. Botafoc, however, has a continuing role in the Vatican's account, and was not lucky enough to perhaps evade the cruel ledger of history.
According to the Vatican records as recounted by Williman and Corsano, Botafoc's galley was "blown ashore" near Carnon Plage (via Williman and Corsano) and with it, de Castillon's fortune.
The spoils of the late bishop's myriad investments, which included gold coins, silver plate, jewels, tapestries, ecclesiastical rarities, compact altars, and fine rings, were all snatched by the hungriest beast of them all — the sea. Thankfully (for these gentlemen), the shipwreck was close enough to Aigues Mortes that the treasure began to wash ashore, and royal notaries swarmed in to "take inventory," profusely attesting it belonged to Pope Innocent VI (according to Williman and Corsano). The papal subcollector came ashore and declared the treasure "spolia."
A brief reference is made in the Vatican text to the fact that some of de Castillon's treasure was found by local fisherfolk. These fisherfolk are not mentioned again. The pirates were hanged and dubbed "enemies of mankind," and the higher-ranking pirates were thrust into the pope's jail and slapped with steep fines.
Martinus Johannes, presumably, continued sailing and conducting his various pirate ventures on the perilous seas of a world freshly-erupted into French and English War. No one knows exactly what happened to the treasure, but we do know Pope Innocent VI never got all of de Castillon's "spolia" he decreed was his due. Some, perhaps, slipped through the fingers of hungry vicars and found its way to the ocean floor, or perhaps even into the hands of the needy. The rest of the pope's "spolia" was added to Innocent VI's teeming mounds of accumulated wealth, exchanged as gifts to royals, or simply stockpiled amongst the papal reserves. These reserves grew increasingly vast throughout the Middle Ages, and during the rise of the Holy Roman Empire's prime centuries of dominion. The rest, as we know it, is history.
Here is that link.The real reason we can't find Thibaud de Castillon's lost treasure
The São Vicente's mission was to deliver the dead bishop's treasure to Avignon, in France, where Pope Innocent VI (reign 1352-1362) was based. In the 14th century, popes often resided in Avignon due to political turmoil in Italy...
Botafoc's ship was armed to the teeth. Records indicate that his crew carried cutlasses and war pikes, and his galley had at least seven ballistae, which were large, crossbowlike devices capable of launching 9-inch (23 centimeters) stone bullets at high speeds. Two ballistae would have been placed on the bow, one would have been elevated above the deck and the others could have been movable, Williman and Corsano said...
"The poor common sailors were extra-judicially hanged. They were, by tradition, hostes humani generis, enemies of the human race, like highway brigands, and no law protected them," Williman and Corsano told Live Science in an email.
Botafoc and a few of his officers were spared and were sent to prison to await their fate. "Depositing a large amount of gold coin with the bishop of Torino, who happened to be in residence in Montpellier, Botafoc surrendered to the captain of Aigues-Mortes, while his mate and [another officer] went into the custody of the marshal of justice of the papal Curia at Avignon," Williman and Corsano wrote in their book.
Before the authorities could secure the beached pirate vessel, local fishers took items from the ship, claiming right of salvage.
On Feb. 11, 1357, Jean des Baumes, a clerk of a local judge, took inventory of the remaining goods. "Apart from the ship's sail, cordage, oars, armament and rigging, the judge's clerk on the beach listed a great mass of clothing and cloth in odd lots — but also items like books and ecclesiastical vestments," Williman and Corsano wrote.
The recaptured treasure went to the pope and was used as gifts for royalty and to pay soldiers, courtiers and other staff.
While Botafoc's crew was hanged, his officers were let off with a fine, the Vatican records indicate...
The second pirate ship that attacked the São Vicente — the one commanded by Yanes — was never mentioned again in historical records. Yanes' crew may have gotten away cleanly, with a bounty of treasure.
And here is that link.
Pirate Attacks, Corruption & Treasure Revealed in Vatican Archives
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His [Thibaut de Castillon's] wealth was meticulously documented by the pope's executor, who chronicled over 1,800 pounds of silver and gold plate, over twenty mules and horses, and a valuable library of precious works, according to Williman and Corsano's summary translation of the Vatican reports. In the years following de Castillon's death, the pope's executor was obligated by ill fortune to spend 3,000 pounds on cathedral repairs after an earthquake struck Lisboa, and an additional 5,000 in extortion to quell "vexations" from the Infante who temporarily accumulated power through a rebellion against his royal father. Casting these irritations aside, the pope's executor left Lisbon in 1357 en route to the pope's residence in Avignon (France), with the vast majority of de Castillon's wealth in tow.
And here is that link.
The Real Reason We Can't Find Thibaud De Castillon's Lost Treasure
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Fossilization is a rare and selective process. Not every creature that dies is granted the honor of eternal preservation. For a fossil to form, the remains must be buried quickly, usually by sediment, to protect them from scavengers and decay. In most cases, only the hardest parts of the body, like bones or shells, survive this journey. But sometimes, under extraordinary circumstances, softer tissues or even skin impressions are preserved. When two or more fossils overlap in this sacred burial, with one capturing the skin or scales of another, it feels as if nature is deliberately layering secrets for us to uncover. The odds of such preservation are staggeringly low, making every discovery a scientific jackpot...
When Fossils Fossilize Fossils: Skin Impressions Within Bones and Armor - discoverwildscience
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Source: SurfGuru.com. |
The most interesting thing for me is the two negative tides predicted for Monday.
Good hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net