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Joanna, sunk in 1682 off South Africa
An
English East Indiaman on her way
to Surat on the west coast of
India, the Joanna
separated from her convoy and
sank in rough seas on a reef off
the southernmost tip of South
Africa on June 8, 1682, sending
10 people to their death.
Eventually, 104 survivors
reached the Dutch colony of Cape
Town, from which a salvage party
was soon dispatched. The
Joanna’s cargo consisted of
70 chests of silver coins, of
which the salvage party reported
having recovered only about
28,000 guilders’ worth. In 1982
the wreck was re-discovered by a
group of South African divers
led by Gavin Clackworthy, who
brought up silver ingots (discs)
and over 23,000 silver cobs,
most of them Mexican 4 and 8
reales of Charles II in
generally low grade, but a few
showing bold, formerly very rare
dates 1679-1681. Over the past
two decades these cobs have
entered the market from both
private dealers and auctions,
but always in relatively small
quantities at a time. Almost all
the coins are in very worn
condition, usually thin and
nearly featureless, but without
the heavy encrustation and
pitting that characterize
Caribbean finds.
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