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Web
Master
Liz
Stansfeld
512 301 2744
9300 Sandstone Street
Austin, TX 78737 |
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MARINE ARCHAEOLOGY
NEWS AND EVENTS
Distinguished Lecture -
"Khubilai Khan's Lost Fleet"
James P. Delgado, Ph.D., Institute of Nautical Archaeology
Tuesday, April 21, 6:30 p.m. - Houston Musum of Natural Science
$12 HMNS members, $15 nonmembers
MTS members get discounted tickets!
In 1279, near what is now Hong Kong, Mongol ruler Khubilai Khan routed
the Song navy and completed the grand dream of his grandfather, Genghis
Khan - the conquest of China. The Grand Khan now ruled the largest
empire the world had ever seen, stretching from the China Sea to the
plains of Hungary. Having also inherited the World's largest navy - more
than seven hundred ships, the Mongols began audacious attacks on Japan,
Vietnam and Java. Within fifteen years, Khubilai had squandered his
massive fleet.
Considered for seven centuries to be little more than legend, the story
of the Mongol navy has finally been confirmed. Archaeologist James P.
Delgado has dived with the Japanese team studying the remains of the
Khan's lost fleet at Takashima. Using original sources as diverse as
sunken ships, hand-painted scrolls and historical and literary records,
he tells the fascinating tale of Khubilai's maritime forays and solves
one of history's greatest mysteries: what sank the Khan's great fleet?
Released in 2009, Delgado will sign copies of his new book Khubilai
Khan's Lost Fleet: In Search of a Legendary Armada following the
lecture.
This lecture is in conjunction with the new special exhibition Genghis
Khan on display at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. The
exhibition includes findings from Khubilai Khan's lost fleet.
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