Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Mary Rose"


3 mentions found


The Mary Rose was one of the largest warships of the Tudor navy during King Henry VIII’s reign until it sank on July 19, 1545, during a battle against the French. The Mary Rose was one of them, and the flagship became the king’s favorite. The hull of the Mary Rose, supported by a steel cradle attached to a lifting frame, was raised on October 11, 1982. The research team used Raman spectroscopy, a nondestructive method that preserves valuable samples, to study the bones, Shankland said. “Investigating the impact of this on the spine would further our understanding of bone chemistry changes with age, but also with stress from activity.”
Persons: Mary Rose —, Mary Rose, King Henry VIII’s, , Sheona, Henry VIII, Alex Hildred, ” Hildred, , Shankland, Adam Taylor, ” Shankland, Tudor, Richard Madgwick, Madgwick, ” Madgwick, Dr Organizations: CNN, Tudor, Solent, Mary Rose Museum, telltale, Lancaster Medical, Lancaster University, , Mary, University of Glasgow, Fox, Getty, Cardiff University Locations: Solent, Isle of Wight, Great Britain, Portsmouth, England, Brest, France, Scotland, Tudor England
A woman bought her dream wedding dress – a vintage Vera Wang gown – on The RealReal for $280. But the buyer, Mary Rose Sossaman, isn't engaged yet. For a woman who bought her dream wedding dress without being engaged, that wasn't a problem. Advertisement"Even if I had gotten a brand-new wedding dress, it would've needed alterations," she added. AdvertisementUltimately, Sossaman said she has zero regrets and that buying a wedding dress before an engagement comes down to how you feel about your relationship.
Persons: Vera Wang, Mary Rose Sossaman, isn't, , she'd, Sossaman, she's, would've, 🌟🎀, ted Organizations: Service, ust Locations: California
There are three million shipwrecks scattered across the ocean floor. Only a tiny number of these have been explored. This 117-foot craft had sunk in May 1682 after hitting a sandbank, while carrying the Duke of York, the future King James II of England. But only in June last year was the wreck formally identified—and hailed as the most significant maritime discovery since Henry VIII’s warship the Mary Rose was raised in 1982. Another find is a silver teaspoon, with an engraving that suggests it belonged to one of James’s huntsmen, Thomas Jory, a “saucy fellow” who hid under a seat on a rescue boat as the Gloucester went down.
Total: 3