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Ships and seafaring in ancient times PDF

172 Pages·1996·33.92 MB·English
by  Casson
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I 1 InternationalStandard Book Number0-292-71162-x LibraryofCongress Catalog CardNumber93-61490 Copyright© 1994byLionel Casson FirstUniversityofTexas Press edition, 1994 Allrightsreserved PrintedinGreatBritain Requests forpermissionto reproducematerialfromthiswork shouldbe senttoPermissions, UniversityofTexas Press, Box 7819,Austin,Texas 78713-7819 Designedby RogerDavies \ DucfleyBranch Library ^ 65Worrm StfMt MA Roxbury, 02119-3206 \ HALF-TITLE PAGE Phoenician galley. Detail ofFig. 33. TITLE PAGE KyreniaII, replicaofa small Greekmerchantman ofabout 300BC,undersail. THIS PAGE AscenefromtheBayeux tapestry, depictingone ofWilliam the Conqueror's ships transporting horses as weU as men. Eleventh centuryad. Contents I The Birth ofthe Boatpage 7 2 Egyptpage 13 3 Ancient Shipbuildingpage 26 4 The Sailing Vessel page 36 5 The Warship: Origin and Early Development page 47 6 The Age ofthe Trireme page 60 7 The Age ofthe Supergalleys page 78 8 Winning with Fire: Warships ofthe Byzantine Navy page 96 9 Merchantmen page loi Along the Coasts, in Harbours, on Rivers page 11 In the Northpage I4i 12 A New Age page 152 Bibliographypage 155 Notes page 155 List ofIllustrationspage 156 Indexpage 158 New Zealandaborigines paddle overlakesastridebundles ofreeds. Iraqi herdsmen cross streams on inflatedgoatskins. Tamilnatives The Birth fish by drifting along with a log under the arms, while Sindhi natives Boat fish lying prone over open-mouthed pots. Devices like these were no of the doubtthe earliestforms ofwatertransport, pressed into use by ancient primitive peoples living alonglakes and rivers. Simple, convenient and readily available, theyhave maintained theirusefulness in undeveloped areas to this day. Therecameatimewhenmerefloatswerenotenough,whentravellers sought something thatwould not only buoy them up butkeep them out ofthe water as well, even allow them to venture onto the open sea. The first step in this directionwasthe creation ofrafts, which fully metthese needsandhadtheadditionalvirtueofaccommodatingmorethanasingle person. In places where trees grew, they would have been the type that hasbecomemostfamiliar,ofboundlogs.AlongtheNileorinthemarshy lower stretches ofthe Tigris and Euphrates, where wood is scarce but reedsareabundant,theywereverylikelymadeofbatchesofreedbundles tiedtogether. Incertainareasordinaryraftscannotbeused. TheTigrisandEuphra- tes, for example, along theirupperreaches in Armenia, run with a swift current over many stony rapids, a combination that can easily shatter a lograft. Fromearliesttimestheywerevitalarteries,fortheyfloweddown into and through Mesopotamia, the birthplace ofcivilisation. To exploit themtheinhabitantsdevisedbuoyedrafts,specificallythetypeconsisting of a wooden frame supported by infiated animal skins. Quite possibly they got the idea by observing people crossing the rivers on such skins: the sightcouldwellhave triggered the thoughtthat, ifone bladder cotild hold up the weight ofone person, a batch ofthem set under a platform couldholdup theweightnot only ofseveral people butalso ofwhatever they happened to be carrying. This form ofbuoyed raft was ideal for rivers with rapids. The sharp rocks might cause a blow-out or two, but, with the rest ofthe bladders intact, that was hardly serious - and even thepuncturedonescouldbepatchedinshortorder.Inaddition,itoffered a ready-made solution for the problem that afflicts aU who float down rivers: how to get back against the current. Herodotus, the keen-eyed, keen-minded Greek who has been called Father of History but could equally well be called Father ofthe Travelogue, visited Babylon on the lowerEuphrates aroundthe middle ofthe fifth cenmrybc and describes 1 HeraclessailstotheGardenofthe how raftsmen who came there from the north got themselves home. Hesperides inapotboat. Froman AthenianvaseintheVatican 'Each raft', he writes, 'has aboard a live donkey, the larger ones several. Museum, about480BC. After arriving at Babylon and disposing oftheir cargo, the men auction offthe wooden frame, load the bladders on the donkeys, and walk back to Armenia." Numbersinthemarginsreferto illustrations. Colourplates are Wheretherewerenorapidstotraverse,rafts couldbebuoyedbyaline indicatedby Romannumerals. of pots, which, though clumsier than bladders, had the advantage of TheBirth oftheBoat

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Overview: Ever since the earliest travelers took to the water on reed rafts or inflated goatskins, ships and boats have played a paramount role in the history of the Western world. The invention of the sail about 3500 BC resulted in ever faster and more efficient water transport, and the great civil
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