What are these?

signumops

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AUVnav

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One looks just like a US quarter!

not sure about the other, any idea of the composition?

(they could be Jenn Marx earrings from a dive)
 

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LeBaiton

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First post but long time lurker. History, shipwrecks and archeology fascinates me but I am not an active treasurehunter. I only dream about it :)

Registered just to reply to your post. Could these be the decorative tops for musket powder bottles which hung on a bandolier?

Bandolier of a Musketeer

Regards,

LeBaiton
 

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signumops

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I like the idea about the musket charger caps, but I think they are too small. They look like silver plated copper to me, but, I don't know for sure. I'll ask.
 

mad4wrecks

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The was a British slave ship called Dove lost off the St Augustine bar.

Lost Ships

It looks like a charm of some type to me as well but the hollow insides do appear as it they would fit as a cap over something.

Tom
 

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signumops

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The finder PM'd me and says they are pure silver and weigh 9 gr. a piece. Yep, that sounds like the wreck. These were found "near" there.
 

E

elle

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I might be wrong, but I believe those are milagros (MILAGRO means MIRACLE).
These charms were offerings to a particular saint for help in curing an ailment. Many milagros were shaped as a specific body part (head might have meant a person got headaches). They were usually created with silver or tin, but wax and other metals were also used.
The charms could have been rounded or dimensional (like those in the pictures), and not just flat. Some were designed to be only a quarter of an inch in size.

The charms were part of the Roman Catholic Church (folk Catholicism) and used as devotions. The Catholic faith evolved alongside many different cultures, so these would have been important in Latin America, and really, all over the world. Ones in Europe were called EX-VOTOS (meaning OFFERINGS).

Here is my question. Who was Catholic on a British Protestant ship carrying slaves?
Maybe there is a Spanish wreck (just my guess) near the Dove, or maybe even under it. The bar of St. Augustine has taken down hundreds of ships, right?

Laura J
 

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Chagy

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Elle wrote; Here is my question. Who was Catholic on a British Protestant ship carrying slaves?

They are African that is Elegua...... Santeria The Rule of Locumi originated in the west of Africa by the Yorubas, many came as slaves to Cuba, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and many other places. By 1820 95% of the Yorubas were slaves.

images (1).jpg images (2).jpg images.jpg images (3).jpg
 

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signumops

signumops

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Great Balls O Fire!! I knew I posted these in the right place. Chagy NAILED it! Many thanks! The guy who found these is out of town this week and may not see this post for a few days, but he has been trying to get this solved for many months and will be absolutlely thrilled. No question about the design.
Now the really big questions are : how did these get where they were found, were they original property of a slave on the Dove, were they stolen from a slave, did the owner escape the wreck?
 

Darren in NC

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I still don't understand exactly what they are.

EDIT: Thanks to Chagy, I looked up Elegua and found that they are essentially for good luck. They are used in a variety of ways - as pendants (Terry's photos above) and stone doorstops (Chagy's photos) so that all who enter a house will have opportunity. No doubt they must be related to the Dove. Since it sank, anyone on the vessel could have drifted, drowned or simply lost them while trying to swim away.
 

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signumops

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Turns out that this is a good luck symbol, and widely used totem in the modern-day newage/fairydust community. May have been left there by a sympathetic mourner. Can't tell without some other supporting stuff from the immediate area. Will see.
 

Darren in NC

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Good point on modern use, Terry. I'm skeptical about a new-age practitioner even knowing about the Dove, much less tossing over silver charms. The ones you posted look much older than the modern versions I've seen. My bet would be that they are contemporary of the wreck. As you stated, more supporting evidence will tell the tale.
 

Chagy

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The ones made out of rock are no doorstops they are the image of a saint (Elegua) in the Yoruba religion. This is how the first of the Yoruba believers would create the image of Elegua and still to this day Santeros use the same image. The small shells used for Elegua's eyes are the same kind of shells used by the Paleros to tell the future or to read your fortune

images.jpg
 

ivan salis

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just got off the phone with the finder * - I told him what these were long ago -- if one looks up santeria god image --you will find a matching "shell face" image -- what we call -- santeria--- is a blended mixture of the native Yoruba faith --(Regla de Ocha - - in english -- The Rule of the Orisha-) and catholic faith --- there are 4 warroir gods in the traditional Youbra faith --with Eshu "aka" the trickster" being thought of the most powerful one --* the cowrie shells are used to make his face -- its a ESHU / ELEGUA charm of either the original AFRICAN YOUBRA FAITH OR LATER SANTERIA FAITH

I told the finder a long time ago what they were but without a "dead nuts" photograpthic match he had "issues' believing me , so he drug them around for several archie type "experts" to look at --all who had no clue as to what they were -- thankfully chagy has now provided the matching "images" to prove 100% exactly what they are -- which is exactly what I told him they were all along . -- sometimes its not easy to get folks to believe your ID is accurite
 

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signumops

signumops

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I'll let you know what the finder says... he has recovered some pretty spectacular stuff in the last year or so. It would be very significant, to me at least, if these were genuinely a product of the Dove and not simply a beach goer's forgotten jewelry, left carelessly on a beach towel.
 

ivan salis

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slaves would not have silver jewelry ( silver was valuible)-- but the slave translator might * -- slave ships often had a slave translator who told slaves what to do while aboard ship in their native tongue * --the translator might have also helped in africa when "talking' with local tribal slave sellers about buying slaves --the translator was most likely a african * and thus believed in the youbra religion or santeria.
 

Chagy

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slaves would not have silver jewelry ( silver was valuible)-- but the slave translator might * -- slave ships often had a slave translator who told slaves what to do while aboard ship in their native tongue * --the translator might have also helped in africa when "talking' with local tribal slave sellers about buying slaves --the translator was most likely a african * and thus believed in the youbra religion or santeria.

Why not? Before they became slaves they were free in Africa..That is like saying Indians would not have silver and gold jewelry. Sure it was valuable to some people but for the natives it was just a good and easy material to work with. Plus who do you think made the Elegua pendants? Those same African that became slaves...
 

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Oceanscience

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Brass container.jpg Since we talk about African slave charms, I post this here.

Sailors were always superstitious. This is why we find all sorts of charms and amulets on the shipwrecks.
The time of the buccaneers and pirates also coincides with the time of the slave ships.
Some pirates even specialized in capturing slave ships.
The slaves brought their own beliefs and superstitions. These, in time became the Voodoo, Santeria and Macumba that still go strong in our days.
When we find charms and amulets on pirate ships, we wonder if they belonged to the European pirates who were often former indenturees, we might just as well call that slavery too, or the former African slaves, now turned pirates, who made up more than half of the crew.
Below is the picture of a small brass container found on a pirate shipwreck.
What could be the origin of this container? There is another one about the same size but a bit different.
What might be the use of the container?
From the archaeologist point of view, we would look at the context to give some indication where to search for answers, but here we have a problem. There are 2 pirate shipwrecks close together.
The one pirate was specialized in capturing slave ships.
The other one came from the “South Sea”.
To me the engravings seem to look kind of African origin.
Any suggestions?
 

Sapper23

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Terry, Chagy, Ivan, Laura, Everyone

Thank You !!! these two items', been a big Mystery.

I have written all over the East Coast, to the Whydah Project, UF, FSU, even to Kathy D. no one never seen anything like it !!
there where other items found, but these " Silver Amulet's ".. was a Mystery.. Ivan was right, why back.. I had 4 different research story's, and no photo's..
So far,' there's only two found!.. My friend has the other, His was found less then a mile away.. You never know what you are going to find!!!

Again,' Thank You all!!. if ya'll are up my way. Lunch is on me!! " I hope, ya'll like MRE's "
 

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