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      • Archaeologists from the University of Indiana say they have found the wreck of the Quedagh Merchant, an Armenian ship loaded with treasures satins, muslins, silver and gold that probably belonged to the British East India Company before being commandeered by Kidd in 1699.
      www.independent.co.uk › news › world
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  2. Quedagh Merchant. Quedagh Merchant ( / ˈkwiːdɑː ( x )/; Armenian: Քեդահյան վաճառական Qedahyan Waćařakan ), also known as the Cara Merchant and the Adventure Prize, [1] was an Armenian merchant vessel famously captured by Scottish privateer William Kidd on 30 January 1698. The ship was originally owned by a man named ...

  3. A team of Indiana University archaeologists are now excavating and researching the shipwreck near Catalina Island off the southern coast of the Dominican Republic and have found that the archaeological record matches very well with the historical record, indicating that Captain Kidd’s lost ship, the Quedagh Merchant, has been found after more ...

  4. Dec 15, 2007 · Archaeologists from the University of Indiana say they have found the wreck of the Quedagh Merchant, an Armenian ship loaded with treasures satins, muslins, silver and gold that probably...

  5. The ship was believed to have been burned at about that time by Kidd’s Dominican colleagues. Kidd fared no better, as he was determined to be a pirate, sent to London, tried, and hanged. Stories of buried treasure abounded, and the wreck of the Quedagh Merchant was much sought after but never found. Until 2007.

  6. May 5, 2024 · The ‘Quedagh Merchant’ was no ordinary ship. Owned by the son of an Armenian Calantar, it was a floating treasure trove. Its cargo was a cornucopia of the East’s riches: 200 packs of muslin , 100 packs of calico , 20 packs of raw silk , 80 boxes of opium , 250 bags of sugar , along with iron, niter, and gleaming gold bars.

  7. Historians write that Kidd captured the Quedagh Merchant, loaded with valuable satins and silks, gold, silver and other East Indian merchandise, but left the ship in the Caribbean as he sailed...

  8. The significant impact of the Armenian traders in the commercial world of early modern times can be reflected in the story of the Quedagh Merchant. This Armenian cargo ship, also known as the Cara or Kary Merchant, was taken over by the privateer William Kidd somewhere in the Indian Ocean in 1698. He subsequently sailed it to the Carribean.

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