The guns recovered from the Mary Rose are highly significant. They include some of the earliest cast bronze muzzle loading guns made in England, as well as a suite of wrought iron breech loaders. Finding these together has completely revised our understanding of the use and longevity of wrought iron guns.
Over the course of the eleven-year excavation of the Mary Rose hull, from her discovery in 1971 until her lifting in 1982, an unprecedented arrangement of 16th century guns were found, most of them still on their wooden carriages. These carriages and others found on shipwrecks are, with a few exceptions, the only evidence of carriages. The ones found with the Mary Rose are among some of the earliest examples.
On the upper deck a bronze muzzle-loading gun called a culverin was found; this particular culverin would have been loaded with iron shot five inches in diameter. It was found on its carriage, the muzzle pointing out of an unlidded gun port and with a shot still loaded in the barrel. One of my jobs as a Conservation Intern at the Mary Rose Trust in the summer of 2024 was to, with the help of another intern, clean and conserve the gun carriage.