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Everything posted by Louie da fly
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Whilst browsing, I came across this site - discovery of the animal figurehead of Gribshunden, a Danish royal ship which burned and sank in 1495. Though it's from the far north,this figurehead is very similar to examples in the pictorial record, including ones from Spain as outlined in this site, and I've also seen at least one of a Mediterranean ship (though from a German source - it's a record of a German man's pilgrimage to Jerusalem). And here's another report with LOTS of pictures from several angles. Dick, this might be applicable to your nave tonda. At the least it's very interesting! Steven
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Yes, I think so. It's battle-ready, with masts already removed . . . If you were undertaking a voyage under oars, however, you'd keep the mast and yards in place - apparently they were accustomed to combining oars and sail when the wind was in the right direction. Steven
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There are quite a few contemporary pictures of boats "of all nations" in Woodrat's carrack/Nave tonda build at http://modelshipworld.com/index.php/topic/4915-venetian-carrack-or-nave-tonda-by-woodrat/?hl=%2Bnave+%2Btonda- scroll throug te pics and every so often there's a representation of a boat. Most of these are within 20 years or so either side of Columbus' voyage so you should be fairly sure you're on the money with them. Steven
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French Pre-Dreadnought Battleship Carnot
Louie da fly replied to dgbot's topic in Nautical/Naval History
I love these things. So beautifully ugly. Not so much a swan as a pelican . . or perhaps a dugong. For an absolute feast of these ungainly beauties, see https://www.google.com.au/search?q=french+battleship+carnot&espv=2&biw=1280&bih=685&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwigu7mnpLrJAhXk26YKHc8_CZUQ_AUIBigB#imgrc=_ Which confirms me in my original impression - one of Carnot's funnels was square! -
The Wikipedia article at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trireme says the Ancient Greeks took down the masts and railings before battle (in the paragraph entitled Tactics. I read somewhere recently that they actually threw the masts overboard before going into battle and retrieved them afterwards. Certainly most battles were fought near land, so it's not unlikely they sent the ashore if they knew they were in for a fight. In Byzantine times the same thing applied - masts were lowered before battle. They were nothing but an impediment and could actually be a danger if, say the enemy managed to cut the shrouds and make the mast fall. Furling a sail by climbing out onto the yard was the common way to go until the development of footropes in the 17th or 18th century. Pictures of of 15th and early-mid 16th century ships show this, and there's no reason to suppose it wasn't done this way throughout history. Steven
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A beautiful ram, certainly, but perhaps not the first discovered. There's another at Piraeus museum which I saw when I visited Athens in 2000. As far as I know it had been there for quite some time. It's at http://greeklandscapes.com/greece/piraeus/pictures/pages/dsc00158_jpg.htm I have my own photo of it somewhere among my holiday snaps.
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Cotton bales aboard HMS Bounty?
Louie da fly replied to Captain Al's topic in Nautical/Naval History
I thought she was loaded up with breadfruit on her mutiny voyage, and the space that had to be made over to the plants was one of the causes of dissatisfaction on board. (Along with Bligh's personality - although a relatively humanitarian captain and a superior seaman, he seems to have very few people skills. Some years later, when the governor of New South Wales, he suffered another mutiny, known as the Rum Rebellion, this time by the New South Wales Corps, who were supposed to keep order in the colony but had let power go to their heads). Steven -
Dick, you're a mine of information. Following your post I did a google search and found this article available on-line which deals, among others, with the Woolwich ship, including diagrams showing the mast in cross section and in side view, as well as the remnants of the surviving frames up to about the turn of the bilge. Thanks very much for this. It's really useful and very much appreciated. Steven
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Possible significant maritime find in England
Louie da fly replied to BANYAN's topic in Nautical/Naval History
You might be interested in the blog of the guy who first proposed that the remains of the Holigost might be in the Hamble. It's currently the top entry of the blog, but will presumably go down the list as other items get added. Anyhow, it's dated October 15, 2015. The other entries are pretty cool, too. Steven -
Yep. Same as ours. It's regarded as a bit of a weed nowadays, though it was used by the early settlers for hedging paddocks (presumably to keep animals from straying) and we still have many hawthorn hedges on the roadsides at the edge of paddocks near Ballarat where I live, where they probably still do good service.
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Found another one - this is described simply as "school of Du"rer, c.1500". So it's presumably a German vessel - but not necessarily. Quite similar to W.A's Kraek, but with some interesting variations. Oh, and I've managed to chase down the pictures I thought were of Portuguese carracks (on a much earlier page of this thread). They turn out to be Spanish, from a painted church panel celebrating a naval victory in 1475, and one of the ships is actually a named vessel, the Zumaia, the flagship of the Spanish admiral. Steven
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Well, usually I just stumble across them while looking for something else. It all depends on the wording you put into the google image search. I agree they look like they're done from models, but I think the artist has also added to the decoration on his own account just to make a better picture. And are the scuppers aligned to the projecting deck beams? It's hard to make out . . . And here's another one I came across yesterday. It looks like others I've seen, but I don't think I've come across it before. Some very interesting details. Look at the shape of the blocks and deadeyes! And is that wattling (basketweaving with willow twigs) on the aftercastle? It'd make sense - very lightweight construction. Steven
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Just discovered some more (Italian) pictures of the hulls of carracks (or "proto-carracks" - no masts are shown, so they may be single-masted). They're from the Codex Vallardi, a book of sketches and life studies by Pisanello, who died in about 1455. Some really good details. Hope you enjoy these as much as I did. Steven PS: The dragons may not have been drawn from life . . .
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Possible significant maritime find in England
Louie da fly replied to BANYAN's topic in Nautical/Naval History
This is very exciting indeed. I'd already heard of the Grace Dieu find and the Time Team excavation, but I knew nothing of the Holigost. I await developments with great interest. I have to say, however, that the artist's reconstruction has to be wrong - it shows a ship from the 1470's, of a type I like to call a 'proto-carrack' - very similar in form to a carrack but with a single mast. But according to the report here the Holigost was a Spanish ship captured by the English in 1413/14 and rebuilt in 1415. If she was leaking badly by 1423, with the mast and rigging removed by 1426, abandoned by 1430, and sunk by 1452, it's very unlikely she was new when she was first captured. Her date of building has to be no later than 1413 and very likely quite a few years - or even some decades - earlier. This puts her much closer in date to the Bremen cog, sunk while still under construction in 1380. And contemporary representations of ships from the first decades of the 15th century look much more like cogs than carracks - such as the ships in the second picture here and the attached picture from the above linked article, which though it's dated 1420-30 is still very much like cogs from 50 years earlier. The problem is that the great majority of commonly available mediaeval representations of ships from the Hundred Years War were done well after the events - the best known being from the Gruuthus version of Froissart's Chronicles, produced in the 1470s and 1480s, but portraying events of up to 100 years earlier. I'm hoping that as more is discovered a more accurate reconstruction drawing will be produced. Steven -
Dick, A few more pics of carracks I came across. The Meister Der Ursulalegende one (I had to extract details from the main painting, otherwise the picture would have been too big to upload) backs up your ideas about the tumblehome at the bow, and the others are very interesting. The da Costa one appears to have been mostly copied from the Roberti (I'm pretty sure it's that way around because of the mistakes in the da Costa version, such as the square sail at the mizzen and the misinterpretation of the anti-boarding timbers at the bow). Best wishes, Steven
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I've been giving the built up mast issue a little thought. As I'm sure you know, the masts of later, bigger ships were also built up, but with the individual pieces locking together so closely (a little like lego) that there would be very little chance of them coming apart, and the joins of individual pieces being all but invisible. And of course held together with the wooldings. The ships of the 15th century were probably the first to be big enough (especially with that enormous mainsail, with the ensuing huge forces) to need such large masts that they had to be built up (because single trees weren't big enough to supply the timber) - even before the advent of the carrack, when ships only had a single mast as in the ships in the second picture here (which are labelled as 14th century but are in fact 15th). However, it seems to me that the shipbuilders of the time would have been sophisticated and skilful enough not to just whack a bunch of poles together and hope the wooldings would keep them from coming apart. I think they'd likely have been made from triangular sections with the apexes converging at the centre of the mast, and rounded off to form a circular section. Later improvements as above would have made them more secure still, but this would have been a pretty good start. Opinion only, but might be helpful. Steven
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Here’s the latest on the design process. I’ve changed the cross section in line with the discoveries at Yenikapi, and it’s made quite a difference in many areas. The underwater hull has a considerably flatter bottom than the previous reconstruction, and this means the underwater shape is different. Effectively, the ship sits lower in the water, and this affects the height of the lower bank of oars – from what I’ve been able to find out, a freeboard of about 1 metre (3 feet) was usual between the water and the lower bank of oarports. So the oarsmen are going to be sitting higher in the ship. And as you need about a metre between the heads of the lower oarsmen and the upper benches, the upper guys move up too. And then the floor structure of the midships castle, which needs to clear the heads of the upper oarsmen, has to be higher. Everything affects everything else . . . I’ve done about half the body plan - from the bow to midships (attached) showing the assumed position of the oarsmen. But of course, how low in the water the ship actually sat is an imponderable as well, depending on the weight of the ship itself, plus that of the crew and cargo and equipment etc etc. I can only guess and hope I’m about right. What appears to be the upper part of the hull is very lightweight - just a rail (pavesade) to carry the shields of the upper oarsmen. But the midships castle would weigh a fair bit, so how far down the ship would sit is rather uncertain. I’ve also changed a few details. The ship is “leaner” in sheer view, and I’ve altered the shape of the “tail” and that of the side rudders to be more in line with illustrations contemporary with a dromon of the period of the Macedonian Emperors of the 10th and 11th centuries AD. The spur at the bow is fixed higher and is horizontal rather than angled upward, to avoid the tendency to pivot around its point of attachment on impact, with the danger of damage to the bow of the ship. There’s more sheer, and the bow is wider and shallower to ride over the sea rather than cut through it, in line with the Yenikapi finds, as shown on the photo below of a 1:10 scale reconstruction done by TAMU . However, this is of a single-banked galea - no dromons were found at Yenikapi, so I've had to adapt this to a two-banked design and hope it's right. Generally, however, it’s still very close to Prof Pryor’s original concept. I’m still working at it, but it’s all rather slow.
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Moving a workshop is a large operation. No wonder we haven't heard from you lately. The mast issue is certainly a bit of a puzzle. I looked at it when I was making my Great Harry many years ago, but ended up just making a single-piece mainmast. If I did it today I'd probably want to go with multi-piece, but I have no more idea than you of how to do it. The dromon design is going slowly. I've pretty much given up on the cross-section, and I'm working on redesigning the full vessel in accordance with the Yenikapi discoveries in Istanbul. The problem is when you change one thing, everything else is affected. Changing the shape of the section affects the height of the waterline, which affects the position of the lower bank of oarsmen, which in turn affects the height of the upper bank, which then affects the height of the midships castle . . . and I’ve recently got a new job which involves using AutoCad eight hours a day designing houses, so when I get home it’s a bit hard forcing myself to the computer to open up AutoCad to work on a ship design . . . I’ll get there eventually, but it does rather stretch things out. I’m going to add an update to my dromon thread to show how things are going. Steven
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Dick, I realised I hadn't complimented you on the most recent pictures of the nave tonda. She looks magnificent. Haven't heard from you for awhile. Are you still working on the ship? I just came across a good picture showing a careened carrack in Carpaccio's Meeting of the betrothed from the St Ursula cycle. Zoomed up to full size it loses a bit of detail, but it's pretty damn good. It's at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Departure_of_the_Pilgrims_by_Carpaccio then you click on the picture for a huge copy of it. And I just noticed, at the bottom of the same page there are thumbnails of other details of the same picture showing not only a much better detail of the same carrack, but very good detailed pics of the other carracks in the same harbour, and two others I'd never seen, apparently in dry dock, from the left hand side of the painting. The careened carrack's rigging, and the way it's being held in place, are also very interesting. Right down the bottom of the page are links to the other paintings in the Ursula cycle, some of which have exceptionally detailed representations of ships. Best wishes, Steven
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