Casimiro, Tânia ManuelDostal, ChristopherCastro, FilipeAlmeida, AnaMagalhães, IvoneTeixeira, ElsaFrias-Bulhosa, Elsa2024-06-182024-06-1820241557-2285PURE: 81470495PURE UUID: 3b5026f7-bc47-4236-b73e-5e041af2c8c1http://hdl.handle.net/10362/168664UIDB/04004/2020 DL 57/2016/CP1453/CT0084During winter storms in 2014 and 2017, strong waves exposed hundreds of timbers and artefacts at the Belinho beach, in the North of Portugal. These ship remains were later discovered to belong to a 16th-century shipwreck, probably originating from Northern Europe. This paper aims to discuss the importance of cargo analysis through the study of the material culture associated with that site, consisting mainly of hundreds of pewter, brass, lead, iron, and stone artefacts. Most of these objects seem to have belonged to the ship’s cargo and are tied to a European trade system reflecting economic, cultural, and symbolic behaviours.181339249engCargoPewterBrassShipwreckMetal objects were much desiredjournal article10.1007/s11457-024-09388-5A Sixteenth-Century Shipwreck Cargo off the Coast of Esposende (Portugal) and the Importance of Studying Ship Cargoshttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11457-024-09388-5#citeas