Remains of human habitation have been found from the prehistoric,
Roman, and
Saxon eras, showing that humans retreated towards progressively higher ground over these periods. Offshore from
Bouldnor, Isle of Wight, divers have found at depth the submerged remains of a wooden building that was built there on land around 6000 BC when the sea level was lower and the land was higher. There is an early
Norman period report that much land on the south of
Hayling Island was lost to sea flood. South of Hayling Island in the Solent is a deposit of stones, which
scuba divers found to be the remains of a stone building, probably a church. There is an old report that this church was formerly in the middle of Hayling Island. If similar amounts of land have been lost on other parts of the Solent shore, the Solent was likely to have been much narrower in
Roman times, and it is possible to believe
Diodorus Siculus's report that in his time men could wade to the Isle of Wight at low tide. In the early 16th century,
Henry VIII built an extensive set of
coastal defences at each end of the Solent, part of his
Device Forts, effectively controlling access to east and west. In 1545, a
naval battle was fought in the Solent between English and French naval forces. The battle was inconclusive with no significant losses other than Henry VIII's flagship, the
Mary Rose, which foundered and sank while making a sharp turn. From a total crew of over 400 (some estimates have suggested as many as 700), fewer than 35 survived the sinking. The remains of the
Mary Rose were discovered at the bottom of the Solent by a salvage project in 1971 and were successfully salvaged in 1982. The remains of the hull and a large number of artefacts can be seen in the Mary Rose Museum located in the
Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. In 1685, King
James II narrowly escaped shipwreck while sailing in the Solent. Musician
Henry Purcell wrote "They that go down to the sea in ships" to be sung by the extraordinary voice of
John Gostling in commemoration of this event. More forts were built on land and at sea in the 19th century. These were generally known as
Palmerston Forts. The Solent was one of two sites for the
sailing events at the
1908 Summer Olympics. The Solent became the departure area of the ill-fated ocean liner,
Titanic, in April 1912. A bank in the centre of the Solent,
Bramble Bank, is exposed at
low water at spring tide. This, combined with the unique tidal patterns in the area, makes navigation challenging. There is an annual
cricket match on Bramble Bank during the lowest tide of the year, but games are often cut short by rising tide. According to the BBC, the at Ryde gives a major advantage to
hovercraft which can travel right up a beach and the Solent is the only place in Western Europe where there is a regular passenger service. The operator,
Hovertravel, claims it is the world's only commercial passenger hovercraft. It celebrated 50 years of operation in 2015. Image:IsleofWightmap 1945.jpg|A map of the Solent and surrounding areas from 1945 File:Calshot castle evening.JPG|
Calshot Castle protected the mouth of
Southampton Water ==See also==