Mentor (brig)

The Mentor was a brig bought by Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, in order to transport antiquities from Athens. The cargo included a significant number of sculptures from the Parthenon.

Cargo
Commanded by Captain William Eglen, it left Piraeus on 18 September 1802 with seventeen cases full of antiquities, including:


 * 14 pieces of the Parthenon Frieze
 * 4 pieces of the frieze of the temple known as Athena Nike on the Acropolis
 * a marble throne

Sinking
The ship sailed a longer route than to pick up additional cargo. Having spent the night at Cape Matapan, the ship departed during strong easterly winds, and aimed to anchor at Kythira, but the bad weather meant it could not dock at the small port of Avlemonas and it swung onto the rocks. The crew and passengers were saved by a nearby boat, but the Mentor and its cargo sank to a depth of 23 meters. In the two years following the shipwreck, with the help of local divers, most of the antiquities were recovered.

Recovery attempts
Between 2011 and 2016, divers organized by the Greek Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities uncovered some of the sunken antiquities.