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Galley

A galley is a type of ship that is propelled mainly by oars. The galley is characterized by its long, slender hull, shallow draft, and low freeboard (clearance between sea and gunwale). Virtually all types of galleys had sails that could be used in favorable winds, but human effort was always the primary method of propulsion. This allowed galleys to navigate independently of winds and currents. The galley originated among the seafaring civilizations around the Mediterranean Sea in the late second millennium BC and remained in use in various forms until the early 19th century in warfare, trade, and piracy.

A model of a Maltese design typical of the 16th century, the last great era of the war galley in the Mediterranean Sea

Galleys were the warships used by the early Mediterranean naval powers, including the Greeks, Illyrians, Phoenicians, and Romans. They remained the dominant types of vessels used for war and piracy in the Mediterranean Sea until the last decades of the 16th century. As warships, galleys carried various types of weapons throughout their long existence, including rams, catapults, and cannons, but also relied on their large crews to overpower enemy vessels in boarding actions. They were the first ships to effectively use heavy cannons as anti-ship weapons. As highly efficient gun platforms, they forced changes in the design of medieval seaside fortresses as well as refinement of sailing warships.

Galleys were the most common warships in the Atlantic Ocean during the Middle Ages, and later saw limited use in the Caribbean, the Philippines, and the Indian Ocean in the early modern period, mostly as patrol craft to combat pirates. From the mid-16th century galleys were in intermittent use in the Baltic Sea, with its short distances and extensive archipelagoes. The zenith of galley usage in warfare came in the late 16th century with battles like that at Lepanto in 1571, one of the largest naval battles ever fought. By the 17th century, however, sailing ships and hybrid ships like the xebec displaced galleys in naval warfare. There was a minor revival of galley warfare in the 18th century in the wars among Russia, Sweden, and Denmark.

Definition and terminology

The term galley derives from the Medieval Greek galea, a smaller version of the dromon, the prime warship of the Byzantine navy.[1] The origin of the Greek word is unclear but could possibly be related to galeos, the Greek word for dogfish shark.[2] The word galley has been attested in English from c. 1300[3] and has been used in most European languages from around 1500 both as a general term for oared warships, and from the Middle Ages and onward more specifically for the Mediterranean-style vessel.[4] It was only from the 16th century that a unified galley concept came in use. Before that, particularly in antiquity, there was a wide variety of terms used for different types of galleys. In modern historical literature, galley is occasionally used as a general term for various types of oared vessels larger than boats, though the "true" galley is defined as the ships belonging to the Mediterranean tradition.[5]

 
The English-built Charles Galley, a "galley frigate" built in the 1670s. It was not a "true" galley, but the term still became part of its name due to its oars.

Ancient galleys were named according to the number of oars, the number of banks of oars or lines of rowers. The terms are based on contemporary language use combined with more recent compounds of Greek and Latin words. The earliest Greek single-banked[6] galleys are called triaconters (from triakontoroi, "thirty-oars") and penteconters (pentēkontoroi, "fifty-oars").[7] For later galleys with more than one row of oars, the terminology is based on Latin numerals with the suffix -reme from rēmus, "oar". A monoreme has one bank of oars, a bireme two, and a trireme three. Since the maximum banks of oars was three, any expansion above that did not refer to additional banks of oars, but of additional rowers for every oar. Quinquereme (quintus + rēmus) was literally a "five-oar", but actually meant that there were several rowers to certain banks of oars which made up five lines of oar handlers. For simplicity, they have by many modern scholars been referred to as "fives", "sixes", "eights", "elevens", etc. Anything above six or seven rows of rowers was not common, though even a very exceptional "forty" is attested in contemporary source. Any galley with more than three or four lines of rowers is often referred to as a "polyreme".[8]

Classicist Lionel Casson has applied the term "galley" to oared Viking ships of the Early and High Middle Ages, both their well known longship warships and their less familiar merchant galleys.[9] Oared military vessels built on the British Isles in the 11th to 13th centuries were based on Scandinavian designs, but were nevertheless referred to as "galleys". Many of them were similar to birlinns (a smaller version of the Highland galley), close relatives of longship types like the snekkja. By the 14th century, they were replaced with balingers in southern Britain while longship-type Highland and Irish galleys and birlinns remained in use throughout the Middle Ages in northern Britain.[10]

 
Watercolor of United States ships at the Battle of Valcour Island, depicting several "row galleys"; similar function, but based on very different designs from Mediterranean galleys.

Medieval and early modern galleys used a different terminology from their ancient predecessors. Names were based on the changing designs that evolved after the ancient rowing schemes were forgotten. Among the most important is the Byzantine dromon, the predecessor to the Italian galea sottila. This was the first step toward the final form of the Mediterranean war galley. As galleys became an integral part of an advanced, early modern system of warfare and state administration, they were divided into a number of ranked grades based on the size of the vessel and the number of its crew. The most basic types were the following: large commander "lantern galleys", half-galleys, galiots, fustas, brigantines, and fregatas. Naval historian Jan Glete has described as a sort of predecessor of the later rating system of the Royal Navy and other sailing fleets in Northern Europe.[11]

The French navy and the Royal Navy built a series of "galley frigates" from c. 1670–1690 that were small two-decked sailing cruisers with a set of oarports on the lower deck. The three British galley frigates also had distinctive names – James Galley, Charles Galley, and Mary Galley.[12] In the late 18th century, the term "galley" was in some contexts used to describe minor oared gun-armed vessels which did not fit into the category of the classic Mediterranean type. In North America, during American Revolutionary War and other wars with France and Britain, the early US Navy and other navies built vessels that were called "galleys" or "row galleys", though they were actually brigantines or Baltic gunboats.[13] This type of description was more a characterization of their military role, and was in part due to technicalities in administration and naval financing.[14] In the latter part of the 19th century, the Royal Navy term for the gig (a ship's boat optimised for propulsion by oar) reserved for the captain's use was, very strictly, "galley" – even though it was issued to the ship by the navy dockyard as a gig.[15]

History

Among the earliest known watercraft were canoes made from hollowed-out logs, the earliest ancestors of galleys. Their narrow hulls required them to be paddled in a fixed sitting position facing forward, a less efficient form of propulsion than rowing with proper oars, facing backward. Seagoing paddled craft have been attested by finds of terracotta sculptures and lead models in the region of the Aegean Sea from the 3rd millennium BC. However, archaeologists believe that the Stone Age colonization of islands in the Mediterranean around 8,000 BC required fairly large, seaworthy vessels that were paddled and possibly even equipped with sails.[16] The first evidence of more complex craft that are considered to prototypes for later galleys comes from Ancient Egypt during the Old Kingdom (c. 2700–2200 BC). Under the rule of pharaoh Pepi I (2332–2283 BC) these vessels were used to transport troops to raid settlements along the Levantine coast and to ship back slaves and timber.[17] During the reign of Hatshepsut (c. 1479–57 BC), Egyptian galleys traded in luxuries on the Red Sea with the enigmatic Land of Punt, as recorded on wall paintings at the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari.[18]

 
Assyrian warship, a bireme with pointed bow, from 700 BC

Shipbuilders, probably Phoenician, a seafaring people who lived on the southern and eastern coasts of the Mediterranean, were the first to create the two-level galley that would be widely known under its Greek name, diērēs, or bireme.[19] Even though the Phoenicians were among the most important naval civilizations in early classical antiquity, little detailed evidence have been found concerning the types of ships they used. The best depictions found so far have been small, highly stylized images on seals which depict crescent-shape vessels equipped with one mast and banks of oars. Colorful frescoes on the Minoan settlement on Santorini (c. 1600 BC) show more detailed pictures of vessels with ceremonial tents on deck in a procession. Some of these are rowed, but others are paddled with men laboriously bent over the railings. This has been interpreted as a possible ritual reenactment of more ancient types of vessels, alluding to a time before rowing was invented, but little is otherwise known about the use and design of Minoan ships.[20]

In the earliest days of the galley, there was no clear distinction between ships of trade and war other than their actual usage. River boats plied the waterways of ancient Egypt during the Old Kingdom (2700–2200 BC) and seagoing galley-like vessels were recorded bringing back luxuries from across the Red Sea in the reign of pharaoh Hatshepsut. Fitting rams to the bows of vessels sometime around the 8th century BC resulted in a distinct split in the design of warships, and set trade vessels apart, at least when it came to use in naval warfare. The Phoenicians used galleys for transports that were less elongated, carried fewer oars and relied more on sails. Carthaginian galley wrecks found off Sicily that date to the 3rd or 2nd century BC had a length to breadth ratio of 6:1, proportions that fell between the 4:1 of sailing merchant ships and the 8:1 or 10:1 of war galleys. Merchant galleys in the ancient Mediterranean were intended as carriers of valuable cargo or perishable goods that needed to be moved as safely and quickly as possible.[21]

 
Dionysus riding on a small galley-like craft in a painting from the Dionysus cup by Exekias, from c. 530 BC[22]

The first Greek galleys appeared around the second half of the 2nd millennium BC. In the epic poem, the Iliad, set in the 12th century BC, galleys with a single row of oarsmen were used primarily to transport soldiers to and from various land battles.[23] The first recorded naval battle, the Battle of the Delta between Egyptian forces under Ramesses III and the enigmatic alliance known as the Sea Peoples, occurred as early as 1175 BC. It is the first known engagement between organized armed forces, using sea vessels as weapons of war, though primarily as fighting platforms. It was distinguished by being fought against an anchored fleet close to shore with land-based archer support.[24]

The first true Mediterranean galleys usually had between 15 and 25 pairs of oars and were called triaconters or penteconters, literally "thirty-" and "fifty-oared", respectively. Not long after they appeared, a third row of oars was added by the addition to a bireme of an outrigger, a projecting construction that gave more room for the projecting oars. These new galleys were called triērēs ("three-fitted") in Greek. The Romans later called this design the triremis, trireme, the name it is today best known under. It has been hypothesized that early types of triremes existed as early as 700 BC, but the earliest conclusive literary reference dates to 542 BC.[25] With the development of triremes, penteconters disappeared altogether. Triaconters were still used, but only for scouting and express dispatches.[26]

The first warships

 
A reconstruction of an ancient Greek galley squadron based on images of modern replica Olympias

The earliest use for galleys in warfare was to ferry fighters from one place to another, and until the middle of the 2nd millennium BC had no real distinction from merchant freighters. Around the 14th century BC, the first dedicated fighting ships were developed, sleeker and with cleaner lines than the bulkier merchants. They were used for raiding, capturing merchants and for dispatches.[27] During this early period, raiding became the most important form of organized violence in the Mediterranean region. Maritime classicist historian Lionel Casson used the example of Homer's works to show that seaborne raiding was considered a common and legitimate occupation among ancient maritime peoples. The later Athenian historian Thucydides described it as having been "without stigma" before his time.[28]

The development of the ram sometime before the 8th century BC changed the nature of naval warfare, which had until then been a matter of boarding and hand-to-hand fighting. With a heavy projection at the foot of the bow, sheathed with metal, usually bronze, a ship could incapacitate an enemy ship by punching a hole in its planking. The relative speed and nimbleness of ships became important, since a slower ship could be outmaneuvered and disabled by a faster one. The earliest designs had only one row of rowers that sat in undecked hulls, rowing against tholes, or oarports, that were placed directly along the railings. The practical upper limit for wooden constructions fast and maneuverable enough for warfare was around 25–30 oars per side. By adding another level of oars, a development that occurred no later than c. 750 BC, the galley could be made shorter with as many rowers, while making them strong enough to be effective ramming weapons.[29]

The emergence of more advanced states and intensified competition between them spurred on the development of advanced galleys with multiple banks of rowers. During the middle of the first millennium BC, the Mediterranean powers developed successively larger and more complex vessels, the most advanced being the classical trireme with up to 170 rowers. Triremes fought several important engagements in the naval battles of the Greco-Persian Wars (502–449 BC) and the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC), including the Battle of Aegospotami in 405 BC, which sealed the defeat of Athens by Sparta and its allies. The trireme was an advanced ship that was expensive to build and to maintain due its large crew. By the 5th century, advanced war galleys had been developed that required sizable states with an advanced economy to build and maintain. It was associated with the latest in warship technology around the 4th century BC and could only be employed by an advanced state with an advanced economy and administration. They required considerable skill to row and oarsmen were mostly free citizens who had years of experience at the oar.[30]

Hellenistic era and rise of the Republic

 
A Roman naval bireme in a relief from the Temple of Fortuna Primigenia in Praeneste, (Palastrina)[31] built c. 120 BC,[32] (in the Museo Pio-Clementino).
 
Odysseus and the Sirens, Ulixes mosaic at the Bardo National Museum in Tunis, Tunisia, 2nd century AD

As civilizations around the Mediterranean grew in size and complexity, both their navies and the galleys that made up their numbers became successively larger. The basic design of two or three rows of oars remained the same, but more rowers were added to each oar. The exact reasons are not known, but are believed to have been caused by addition of more troops and the use of more advanced ranged weapons on ships, such as catapults. The size of the new naval forces also made it difficult to find enough skilled rowers for the one-man-per-oar system of the earliest triremes. With more than one man per oar, a single rower could set the pace for the others to follow, meaning that more unskilled rowers could be employed.[33]

The successor states of Alexander the Great's empire built galleys that were like triremes or biremes in oar layout, but manned with additional rowers for each oar. The ruler Dionysius I of Syracuse (c. 432–367 BC) is credited with pioneering the "five" and "six", meaning five or six rows of rowers plying two or three rows of oars. Ptolemy II (283–46 BC) is known to have built a large fleet of very large galleys with several experimental designs rowed by everything from 12 up to 40 rows of rowers, though most of these are considered to have been quite impractical. Fleets with large galleys were put in action in conflicts such as the Punic Wars (246–146 BC) between the Roman Republic and Carthage, which included massive naval battles with hundreds of vessels and tens of thousands of soldiers, seamen, and rowers.[34]

Most of the surviving documentary evidence comes from Greek and Roman shipping, though it is likely that merchant galleys all over the Mediterranean were highly similar. In Greek they were referred to as histiokopos ("sail-oar-er") to reflect that they relied on both types of propulsion. In Latin they were called actuaria (navis) ("ship that moves"), stressing that they were capable of making progress regardless of weather conditions. As an example of the speed and reliability, during an instance of the famous "Carthago delenda est" speech, Cato the Elder demonstrated the close proximity of the Roman arch enemy Carthage by displaying a fresh fig to his audience that he claimed had been picked in North Africa only three days past. Other cargoes carried by galleys were honey, cheese, meat, and live animals intended for gladiator combat. The Romans had several types of merchant galleys that specialized in various tasks, out of which the actuaria with up to 50 rowers was the most versatile, including the phaselus (lit. "bean pod") for passenger transport and the lembus, a small-scale express carrier. Many of these designs continued to be used until the Middle Ages.[35]

Roman Imperial era

 
Two compact liburnians used by the Romans in the campaigns against the Dacians in the early 2nd century AD; relief from Trajan's Column, c. 113 AD

The Battle of Actium in 31 BC between the forces of Augustus and Mark Antony marked the peak of the Roman fleet arm. After Augustus' victory at Actium, most of the Roman fleet was dismantled and burned. The Roman civil wars were fought mostly by land forces, and from the 160s until the 4th century AD, no major fleet actions were recorded. During this time, most of the galley crews were disbanded or employed for entertainment purposes in mock battles or in handling the sail-like sun-screens in the larger Roman arenas. What fleets remained were treated as auxiliaries of the land forces, and galley crewmen themselves called themselves milites, "soldiers", rather than nautae, "sailors".[36]

The Roman galley fleets were turned into provincial patrol forces that were smaller and relied largely on liburnians, compact biremes with 25 pairs of oars. These were named after an Illyrian tribe known by Romans for their sea roving practices, and these smaller craft were based on, or inspired by, their vessels of choice. The liburnians and other small galleys patrolled the rivers of continental Europe and reached as far as the Baltic, where they were used to fight local uprisings and assist in checking foreign invasions. The Romans maintained numerous bases around the empire: along the rivers of Central Europe, chains of forts along the northern European coasts and the British Isles, Mesopotamia, and North Africa, including Trabzon, Vienna, Belgrade, Dover, Seleucia, and Alexandria. Few actual galley battles in the provinces are found in records. One action in 70 AD at the unspecified location of the "Island of the Batavians" during the Batavian Rebellion was recorded, and included a trireme as the Roman flagship.[37] The last provincial fleet, the classis Britannica, was reduced by the late 200s, though there was a minor upswing under the rule of Constantine (272–337). His rule also saw the last major naval battle of the unified Roman Empire (before the permanent split into Western and Eastern [later "Byzantine"] Empires), the Battle of Hellespont of 324. Some time after Hellespont, the classical trireme fell out of use, and its design was forgotten.[38]

Middle Ages

A transition from galley to sailing vessels as the most common types of warships began in the High Middle Ages (c. 11th century). Large high-sided sailing ships had always been formidable obstacles for galleys. To low-freeboard oared vessels, the bulkier sailing ships, the cog and the carrack, were almost like floating fortresses, being difficult to board and even harder to capture. Galleys remained useful as warships throughout the entire Middle Ages because of their maneuverability. Sailing ships of the time had only one mast, usually with just a single, large square sail. This made them cumbersome to steer and it was virtually impossible to sail into the wind direction. Galleys therefore were still the only ship type capable of coastal raiding and amphibious landings, both key elements of medieval warfare.[39]

Eastern Mediterranean

In the eastern Mediterranean, the Byzantine Empire struggled with the incursion from invading Muslim Arabs from the 7th century, leading to fierce competition, a buildup of fleet, and war galleys of increasing size. Soon after conquering Egypt and the Levant, the Arab rulers built ships highly similar to Byzantine dromons with the help of local Coptic shipwrights from former Byzantine naval bases.[40] By the 9th century, the struggle between the Byzantines and Arabs had turned the Eastern Mediterranean into a no-man's land for merchant activity. In the 820s Crete was captured by Andalusian Muslims displaced by a failed revolt against the Emirate of Cordoba, turning the island into a base for (galley) attacks on Christian shipping until the island was recaptured by the Byzantines in 960.[41]

Western Mediterranean

In the western Mediterranean and Atlantic, the division of the Carolingian Empire in the late 9th century brought on a period of instability, meaning increased piracy and raiding in the Mediterranean, particularly by newly arrived Muslim invaders. The situation was worsened by raiding Scandinavian Vikings who used longships, vessels that in many ways were very close to galleys in design and functionality and also employed similar tactics. To counter the threat, local rulers began to build large oared vessels, some with up to 30 pairs of oars, that were larger, faster, and with higher sides than Viking ships.[42] Scandinavian expansion, including incursions into the Mediterranean and attacks on both Muslim Iberia and even Constantinople itself, subsided by the mid-11th century. By this time, greater stability in merchant traffic was achieved by the emergence of Christian kingdoms such as those of France, Hungary, and Poland. Around the same time, Italian port towns and city states, like Venice, Pisa, and Amalfi, rose on the fringes of the Byzantine Empire as it struggled with eastern threats.[43]

After the advent of Islam and Muslim conquests of the 7th and 8th century, the old Mediterranean economy collapsed and the volume of trade went down drastically.[44] The Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, neglected to revive overland trade routes but was dependent on keeping the sea lanes open to keep the empire together. Bulk trade fell around 600–750 while the luxury trade increased. Galleys remained in service, but were profitable mainly in the luxury trade, which set off their high maintenance cost.[45] In the 10th century, there was a sharp increase in piracy which resulted in larger ships with more numerous crews. These were mostly built by the growing city-states of Italy which were emerging as the dominant sea powers, including Venice, Genoa, and Pisa. Inheriting the Byzantine ship designs, the new merchant galleys were similar dromons, but without any heavy weapons and both faster and wider. They could be manned by crews of up to 1,000 men and were employed in both trade and warfare. A further boost to the development of the large merchant galleys was the upswing in Western European pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land.[46]

 
Venetian great galley with three sails taking pilgrims to Jerusalem (Conrad Grünenberg 1486/7)

In Northern Europe, Viking longships and their derivations, knarrs, dominated trading and shipping, though developed separately from the Mediterranean galley tradition. In the South, galleys continued to be useful for trade even as sailing vessels evolved more efficient hulls and rigging; since they could hug the shoreline and make steady progress when winds failed, they were highly reliable. The zenith in the design of merchant galleys came with the state-owned great galleys of the Venetian Republic, first built in the 1290s. These were used to carry the lucrative trade in luxuries from the east such as spices, silks, and gems. They were in all respects larger than contemporary war galleys (up to 46 m) and had a deeper draft, with more room for cargo (140–250 t). With a full complement of rowers ranging from 150 to 180 men, all available to defend the ship from attack, they were also very safe modes of travel. This attracted a business of carrying affluent pilgrims to the Holy Land, a trip that could be accomplished in as little 29 days on the route Venice–Jaffa, despite landfalls for rest and watering or for respite from rough weather.[47]

Development of the true galley

Late medieval maritime warfare was divided in two distinct regions. In the Mediterranean galleys were used for raiding along coasts, and in the constant fighting for naval bases. In the Atlantic and Baltic there was greater focus on sailing ships that were used mostly for troop transport, with galleys providing fighting support.[48] Galleys were still widely used in the north and were the most numerous warships used by Mediterranean powers with interests in the north, especially the French and Iberian kingdoms.[49]

During the 13th and 14th century, the galley evolved into the design that was to remain essentially the same until it was phased out in the early 19th century. The new type descended from the ships used by Byzantine and Muslim fleets in the Early Middle Ages. These were the mainstay of all Christian powers until the 14th century, including the great maritime republics of Genoa and Venice, the Papacy, the Hospitallers, Aragon, and Castile, as well as by various pirates and corsairs. The overall term used for these types of vessels was gallee sottili ("slender galleys"). The later Ottoman navy used similar designs, but they were generally faster under sail, and smaller, but slower under oars.[50] Galley designs were intended solely for close action with hand-held weapons and projectile weapons like bows and crossbows. In the 13th century the Iberian Crown of Aragon built several fleet of galleys with high castles, manned with Catalan crossbowmen, and regularly defeated numerically superior Angevin forces.[51]

From the first half of the 14th century the Venetian galere da mercato ("merchantman galleys") were being built in the shipyards of the state-run Arsenal as "a combination of state enterprise and private association, the latter being a kind of consortium of export merchants", as Fernand Braudel described them.[52] The ships sailed in convoy, defended by archers and slingsmen (ballestieri) aboard, and later carrying cannons. In Genoa, the other major maritime power of the time, galleys and ships in general were more produced by smaller private ventures.

 
A 3D model of the basic hull structure of a Venetian "galley of Flanders", a large trading vessel of the 15th century. The reconstruction by archaeologist Courtney Higgins is based on measurements given in contemporary ship treatises.[53]
 
Illustration of a 15th-century trade galley from a manuscript by Michael of Rhodes (1401–1445) written in 1434

In the 14th and 15th centuries merchant galleys traded high-value goods and carried passengers. Major routes in the time of the early Crusades carried the pilgrim traffic to the Holy Land. Later routes linked ports around the Mediterranean, between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea (a grain trade soon squeezed off by the Turkish capture of Constantinople, 1453) and between the Mediterranean and Bruges – where the first Genoese galley arrived at Sluys in 1277, the first Venetian galere in 1314 – and Southampton. Although primarily sailing vessels, they used oars to enter and leave many trading ports of call, the most effective way of entering and leaving the Lagoon of Venice. The Venetian galera, beginning at 100 tons and built as large as 300, was not the largest merchantman of its day, when the Genoese carrack of the 15th century might exceed 1000 tons.[54] In 1447, for instance, Florentine galleys planned to call at 14 ports on their way to and from Alexandria.[55] The availability of oars enabled these ships to navigate close to the shore where they could exploit land and sea breezes and coastal currents, to work reliable and comparatively fast passages against the prevailing wind. The large crews also provided protection against piracy. These ships were very seaworthy; a Florentine great galley left Southampton on 23 February 1430 and returned to its port at Pisa in 32 days. They were so safe that merchandise was often not insured.[56] These ships increased in size during this period, and were the template from which the galleass developed.

Transition to sailing ships

During the early 15th century, sailing ships began to dominate naval warfare in northern waters. While the galley still remained the primary warship in southern waters, a similar transition had begun also among the Mediterranean powers. A Castilian naval raid on the island of Jersey in 1405 became the first recorded battle where a Mediterranean power employed a naval force consisting mostly of cogs or nefs, rather than the oared-powered galleys. The Battle of Gibraltar between Castile and Portugal in 1476 was another important sign of change; it was the first recorded battle where the primary combatants were full-rigged ships armed with wrought-iron guns on the upper decks and in the waists, foretelling of the slow decline of the war galley.[57]

The sailing vessel was always at the mercy of the wind for propulsion, and those that did carry oars were placed at a disadvantage because they were not optimized for oar use. The galley did have disadvantages compared to the sailing vessel though. Their smaller hulls were not able to hold as much cargo and this limited their range as the crews were required to replenish food stuffs more frequently.[58] The low freeboard of the galley meant that in close action with a sailing vessel, the sailing vessel would usually maintain a height advantage. The sailing vessel could also fight more effectively farther out at sea and in rougher wind conditions because of the height of their freeboard.[59]

Under sail, an oared warship was placed at much greater risk as a result of the piercings for the oars which were required to be near the waterline and would allow water to ingress into the galley if the vessel heeled too far to one side. These advantages and disadvantages led the galley to be and remain a primarily coastal vessel. The shift to sailing vessels in the Mediterranean was the result of the negation of some of the galley's advantages as well as the adoption of gunpowder weapons on a much larger institutional scale. The sailing vessel was propelled in a different manner than the galley but the tactics were often the same until the 16th century. The real-estate afforded to the sailing vessel to place larger cannons and other armament mattered little because early gunpowder weapons had limited range and were expensive to produce. The eventual creation of cast iron cannons allowed vessels and armies to be outfitted much more cheaply. The cost of gunpowder also fell in this period.[60]

The armament of both vessel types varied between larger weapons such as bombards and the smaller swivel guns. For logistical purposes it became convenient for those with larger shore establishments to standardize upon a given size of cannon. Traditionally the English in the North and the Venetians in the Mediterranean are seen as some the earliest to move in this direction. The improving sail rigs of northern vessels also allowed them to navigate in the coastal waters of the Mediterranean to a much larger degree than before.[61] Aside from warships the decrease in the cost of gunpowder weapons also led to the arming of merchants. The larger vessels of the north continued to mature while the galley retained its defining characteristics. Attempts were made to stave this off such as the addition of fighting castles in the bow, but such additions to counter the threats brought by larger sailing vessels often offset the advantages of galley.[62]

Introduction of guns

 
Painting of the Battle of Haarlemmermeer of 1573 by Hendrick Cornelisz Vroom. Note the use of small sailing vessels and galleys on both sides.

From around 1450, three major naval powers established a dominance over different parts of the Mediterranean using galleys as their primary weapons at sea: the Ottomans in the east, Venice in the center and Habsburg Spain in the west.[63] The core of their fleets were concentrated in the three major, wholly dependable naval bases in the Mediterranean: Constantinople, Venice, and Barcelona.[64] Naval warfare in the 16th century Mediterranean was fought mostly on a smaller scale, with raiding and minor actions dominating. Only three truly major fleet engagements were actually fought in the 16th century: the battles of Preveza in 1538, Djerba in 1560, and Lepanto in 1571. Lepanto became the last large all-galley battle ever, and was also one of the largest battle in terms of participants anywhere in early modern Europe before the Napoleonic Wars.[65][66]

The Mediterranean powers also employed galley forces for conflicts outside the Mediterranean. Spain sent galley squadrons to the Netherlands during the later stages of the Eighty Years' War which successfully operated against Dutch forces in the enclosed, shallow coastal waters. From the late 1560s, galleys were also used to transport silver to Genoese bankers to finance Spanish troops against the Dutch uprising.[67] Galleasses and galleys were part of an invasion force of over 16,000 men that conquered the Azores in 1583. Around 2,000 galley rowers were on board ships of the famous 1588 Spanish Armada, though few of these actually made it to the battle itself.[68] Outside European and Middle Eastern waters, Spain built galleys to deal with pirates and privateers in both the Caribbean and the Philippines.[69] Ottoman galleys contested the Portuguese intrusion in the Indian Ocean in the 16th century, but failed against the high-sided, massive Portuguese carracks in open waters.[70]

Even though the carracks themselves were soon surpassed by other types of sailing vessels, their greater range, great size, and high superstructures, armed with numerous wrought iron guns easily outmatched the short-ranged, low-freeboard Turkish galleys.[70] The Spanish used galleys to more success in their colonial possessions in the Caribbean and the Philippines to hunt pirates[71] and sporadically used them in the Netherlands and the Bay of Biscay.[72] Spain maintained four permanent galley squadrons to guard its coasts and trade routes against the Ottomans, the French, and their corsairs. Together they formed the largest galley navy in the Mediterranean in the early 17th century. They were the backbone of the Spanish Mediterranean war fleet and were used for ferrying troops, supplies, horses, and munitions to Spain's Italian and African possessions.[73] In Southeast Asia during the 16th and early 17th century, the Aceh Sultanate had fleets of up to 100 native galleys (ghali) as well as smaller rowed vessels, such as lancarans, galliots, and fustas.[74] Some of the larger vessels were very large with heavier armament than standard Mediterranean galleys, with raised platforms for infantry and some with stern structures similar in height to that of contemporary galleons.[75]

 
Ottoman galleys in battle with raiding boats in the Black Sea; Sloane 3584 manuscript, c. 1636

Galleys had been synonymous with warships in the Mediterranean for at least 2,000 years, and continued to fulfill that role with the invention of gunpowder and heavy artillery. Though early 20th-century historians often dismissed the galleys as hopelessly outclassed with the first introduction of naval artillery on sailing ships,[76] it was the galley that was favored by the introduction of heavy naval guns. Galleys were a more "mature" technology with long-established tactics and traditions of supporting social institutions and naval organizations. In combination with the intensified conflicts this led to a substantial increase in the size of galley fleets from c. 1520–80, above all in the Mediterranean, but also in other European theatres.[77] Galleys and similar oared vessels remained uncontested as the most effective gun-armed warships in theory until the 1560s, and in practice for a few decades more, and were actually considered a grave risk to sailing warships.[78] They could effectively fight other galleys, attack sailing ships in calm weather or in unfavorable winds (or deny them action if needed) and act as floating siege batteries. They were also unequaled in their amphibious capabilities, even at extended ranges, as exemplified by French interventions as far north as Scotland in the mid-16th century.[79]

Heavy artillery on galleys was mounted in the bow, which aligned easily with the long-standing tactical tradition of attacking head on, bow first. The ordnance on galleys was heavy from its introduction in the 1480s, and capable of quickly demolishing the high, thin medieval stone walls that still prevailed in the 16th century. This temporarily upended the strength of older seaside fortresses, which had to be rebuilt to cope with gunpowder weapons. The addition of guns also improved the amphibious abilities of galleys as they could make assaults supported with heavy firepower, and were even more effectively defended when beached stern-first.[80] An accumulation and generalizing of bronze cannons and small firearms in the Mediterranean during the 16th century increased the cost of warfare, but also made those dependent on them more resilient to manpower losses. Older ranged weapons, like bows or even crossbows, required considerable skill to handle, sometimes a lifetime of practice, while gunpowder weapons required considerably less training to use successfully.[81] According to a highly influential study by military historian John F. Guilmartin, this transition in warfare, along with the introduction of much cheaper cast iron guns in the 1580s, proved the "death knell" for the war galley as a significant military vessel.[82] Gunpowder weapons began to displace men as the fighting power of armed forces, making individual soldiers more deadly and effective. As offensive weapons, firearms could be stored for years with minimal maintenance and did not require the expenses associated with soldiers. Manpower could thus be exchanged for capital investments, something which benefited sailing vessels that were already far more economical in their use of manpower. It also served to increase their strategic range and to out-compete galleys as fighting ships.[83]

Mediterranean decline

 
The Battle of Lepanto in 1571, naval engagement between allied Christian forces and the Ottoman Turks

Atlantic-style warfare based on large, heavily armed sailing ships began to change naval warfare in the Mediterranean in the early 17th century. In 1616, a small Spanish squadron of five galleons and a patache was used to cruise the eastern Mediterranean and defeated a fleet of 55 galleys at the Battle of Cape Celidonia. By 1650, war galleys were used primarily in the wars between Venice and the Ottoman Empire in their struggle for strategic island and coastal trading bases and until the 1720s by both France and Spain but for largely amphibious and cruising operations or in combination with heavy sailing ships in a major battle, where they played specialized roles. An example of this was when a Spanish fleet used its galleys in a mixed naval/amphibious battle in the second 1641 battle of Tarragona, to break a French naval blockade and land troops and supplies.[84] Even the Venetians, Ottomans, and other Mediterranean powers began to build Atlantic style warships for use in the Mediterranean in the latter part of the century. Christian and Muslim corsairs had been using galleys in sea roving and in support of the major powers in times of war, but largely replaced them with xebecs, various sail/oar hybrids, and a few remaining light galleys in the early 17th century.[85]

No large all-galley battles were fought after the gigantic clash at Lepanto in 1571, and galleys were mostly used as cruisers or for supporting sailing warships as a rearguard in fleet actions, similar to the duties performed by frigates outside the Mediterranean.[85] They could assist damaged ships out of the line, but generally only in very calm weather, as was the case at the Battle of Málaga in 1704.[86] They could also defeat larger ships that were isolated, as when in 1651 a squadron of Spanish galleys captured a French galleon at Formentera. For small states and principalities as well as groups of private merchants, galleys were more affordable than large and complex sailing warships, and were used as defense against piracy. Galleys required less timber to build, the design was relatively simple and they carried fewer guns. They were tactically flexible and could be used for naval ambushes as well amphibious operations. They also required few skilled seamen and were difficult for sailing ships to catch, but vital in hunting down and catching other galleys and oared raiders.[87]

Mediterranean fleet strengths, number of completed galleys[88]
State 1650 1660 1670 1680 1690 1700 1715 1720
Republic of Venice 70 60 60 60 50 50 50 40
Ottoman Empire 70–100 80–100 60 50 30 30 30 30
France 36 15 25 29 37 36 26 15
Spain (including Italian holdings) 30–40 30–40 30 30 30 30 7 7
Papal states 5 5 5 5 5 4 6 6
Malta 6 7 7 7 8 8 5 5
Genoa 10 10 10 10 10 6 6 6
Tuscany 5 3 4 4 4 3 3 2–3
Savoy 2 2 2 2 2 2 5 5
Austria - - - - - - 4 4
Total (approximate) 220–270 200–240 200 200 175 170 140 120
 
French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, c. 1615

Among the largest galley fleets in the 17th century were operated by the two major Mediterranean powers, France and Spain. France had by the 1650s become the most powerful state in Europe, and expanded its galley forces under the rule of the absolutist "Sun King" Louis XIV. In the 1690s the French galley corps (corps des galères) reached its all-time peak with more than 50 vessels manned by over 15,000 men and officers, becoming the largest galley fleet in the world at the time.[89] Though there was intense rivalry between France and Spain, not a single galley battle occurred between the two great powers during this period, and virtually no naval battles between other nations either.[90] During the War of the Spanish Succession, French galleys were involved in actions against Antwerp and Harwich,[91] but due to the intricacies of alliance politics there were never any Franco-Spanish galley clashes. In the first half of the 18th century, the other major naval powers in the Mediterranean Sea, the Order of Saint John based in Malta, and of the Papal States in central Italy, cut down drastically on their galley forces.[92] Despite the lack of action, the galley corps received vast resources (25–50% of the French naval expenditures) during the 1660s.[93] It was maintained as a functional fighting force right up until its abolition in 1748, though its primary function was more of a symbol of Louis XIV's absolutist ambitions.[94]

The last recorded battle in the Mediterranean where galleys played a significant part was at Matapan in 1717, between the Ottomans and Venice and its allies, though they had little influence on the outcome. Few large-scale naval battles were fought in the Mediterranean throughout most of the remainder of the 18th century. The Tuscan galley fleet was dismantled around 1718, Naples had only four old vessels by 1734 and the French Galley Corps had ceased to exist as an independent arm in 1748. Venice, the Papal States, and the Knights of Malta were the only state fleets that maintained galleys, though in nothing like their previous quantities.[95] By 1790, there were fewer than 50 galleys in service among all the Mediterranean powers, half of which belonged to Venice.[96]

Use in northern Europe

 
Dutch ships ramming Spanish galleys in the Battle of the Narrow Seas, October 1602

Oared vessels remained in use in northern waters for a long time, though in subordinate role and in particular circumstances. In the Italian Wars, French galleys brought up from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic posed a serious threat to the early English Tudor navy during coastal operations. The response came in the building of a considerable fleet of oared vessels, including hybrids with a complete three-masted rig, as well as a Mediterranean-style galleys (that were even attempted to be manned with convicts and slaves).[97] Under King Henry VIII, the English navy used several kinds of vessels that were adapted to local needs. English galliasses (very different from the Mediterranean vessel of the same name) were employed to cover the flanks of larger naval forces while pinnaces and rowbarges were used for scouting or even as a backup for the longboats and tenders for the larger sailing ships.[98] During the Dutch Revolt (1566–1609) both the Dutch and Spanish found galleys useful for amphibious operations in the many shallow waters around the Low Countries where deep-draft sailing vessels could not enter.[91]

While galleys were too vulnerable to be used in large numbers in the open waters of the Atlantic, they were well-suited for use in much of the Baltic Sea by Denmark-Norway, Sweden, Russia, and some of the Central European powers with ports on the southern coast. There were two types of naval battlegrounds in the Baltic. One was the open sea, suitable for large sailing fleets; the other was the coastal areas and especially the chain of small islands and archipelagos that ran almost uninterrupted from Stockholm to the Gulf of Finland. In these areas, conditions were often too calm, cramped, and shallow for sailing ships, but they were excellent for galleys and other oared vessels.[99] Galleys of the Mediterranean type were first introduced in the Baltic Sea around the mid-16th century as competition between the Scandinavian states of Denmark and Sweden intensified. The Swedish galley fleet was the largest outside the Mediterranean, and served as an auxiliary branch of the army. Very little is known about the design of Baltic Sea galleys, except that they were overall smaller than in the Mediterranean and they were rowed by army soldiers rather than convicts or slaves.[100]

Baltic revival and decline

 
A painting of the Battle of Grengam in 1720 by Ferdinand Perrot (1808–41) showing a large Russian galley engaging Swedish frigates at close range. Note the crowded fighting platform (rambade) in the bow.

Galleys were introduced to the Baltic Sea in the 16th century but the details of their designs are lacking due to the absence of records. They might have been built in a more regional style, but the only known depiction from the time shows a typical Mediterranean style vessel. There is conclusive evidence that Denmark-Norway became the first Baltic power to build classic Mediterranean-style galleys in the 1660s, though they proved to be generally too large to be useful in the shallow waters of the Baltic archipelagos. Sweden and especially Russia began to launch galleys and various rowed vessels in great numbers during the Great Northern War in the first two decades of the 18th century.[101] Sweden was late in the game when it came to building an effective oared fighting fleet (skärgårdsflottan, the archipelago fleet, officially arméns flotta, the fleet of the army), while the Russian galley forces under Tsar Peter I developed into a supporting arm for the sailing navy and a well-functioning auxiliary of the army which infiltrated and conducted numerous raids on the eastern Swedish coast in the 1710s.[102]

Sweden and Russia became the two main competitors for Baltic dominance in the 18th century, and built the largest galley fleets in the world at the time. They were used for amphibious operations in Russo-Swedish wars of 1741–43 and 1788–90. The last galleys ever constructed were built in 1796 by Russia, and remained in service well into the 19th century, but saw little action.[103] The last time galleys were deployed in action was when the Russian navy was attacked in Åbo (Turku) in 1854 as part of the Crimean War.[104] In the second half of the 18th century, the role of Baltic galleys in coastal fleets was replaced first with hybrid "archipelago frigates" (such as the turuma or pojama) and xebecs, and after the 1790s with various types of gunboats.[105]

Both the Russian and Swedish navies were based on a form of conscription, and both navies used conscripts as galley rowers. This had several advantages over convicts or slaves: the rowers could be armed to fight as marines, they could be also used as land soldiers and invasion force, and were more skilled than forced labor. Since most naval conscripts came from coastal parishes and towns, most were already experienced seafarers when they entered the service.

Baltic galley fleet strengths[106]
1680 1700 1721 1740 1750 1770 1790 1810 1830
Denmark–Norway 13 7 8 0 0 13 9 0 0
Sweden 0 0 24 38 80 51 39 26 4
Russia 0 0 170 74 100 56 105 20 fewer than 20
total 13 7 202 112 180 120 153 46 < 24

Construction

 
Illustration of an Egyptian rowed ship of c. 1250 BC. Due to a lack of a proper keel, the vessel has a truss, a thick cable along its length, to prevent it from losing its shape.

Galleys have since their first appearance in ancient times been intended as highly maneuverable vessels, independent of winds by being rowed, and usually with a focus on speed under oars. The profile has therefore been that of a markedly elongated hull with a ratio of breadth to length at the waterline of at least 1:5, and in the case of ancient Mediterranean galleys as much as 1:10 with a small draught, the measurement of how much of a ship's structure that is submerged under water. To make it possible to efficiently row the vessels, the freeboard (the height of the railing above the surface of the water) was by necessity kept low. This gave oarsmen enough leverage to row efficiently, but at the expense of seaworthiness. These design characteristics made the galley fast and maneuverable, but more vulnerable to rough weather.

The documentary evidence for the construction of ancient galleys is fragmentary, particularly in pre-Roman times. Plans and schematics in the modern sense did not exist until the 17th century and nothing like them has survived from ancient times. How galleys were constructed has therefore been a matter of looking at circumstantial evidence in literature, art, coinage and monuments that include ships, some of them actually in natural size. Since the war galleys floated even with a ruptured hull and virtually never had any ballast or heavy cargo that could sink them, not a single wreck of one has so far been found. The only exception has been a partial wreck of a small Punic liburnian from the Roman era, the Marsala Ship.[107]

On the funerary monument of the Egyptian king Sahure (2487–2475 BC) in Abusir, there are relief images of vessels with a marked sheer (the upward curvature at each end of the hull) and seven pairs of oars along its side, a number that was likely to have been merely symbolical, and steering oars in the stern. They have one mast, all lowered and vertical posts at stem and stern, with the front decorated with an Eye of Horus, the first example of such a decoration. It was later used by other Mediterranean cultures to decorate seagoing craft in the belief that it helped to guide the ship safely to its destination. These early galleys apparently lacked a keel meaning they lacked stiffness along their length. Therefore, they had large cables connecting stem and stern resting on massive crutches on deck. They were held in tension to avoid hogging, or bending the ship's construction upward in the middle, while at sea.[17] In the 15th century BC, Egyptian galleys were still depicted with the distinctive extreme sheer, but had by then developed the distinctive forward-curving stern decorations with ornaments in the shape of lotus flowers.[108] They had possibly developed a primitive type of keel, but still retained the large cables intended to prevent hogging.[18]

 
A schematic view of the mortise and tenon technique for shipbuilding that dominated the Mediterranean until the 7th century AD[109]

The design of the earliest oared vessels is mostly unknown and highly conjectural. They likely used a mortise construction, but were sewn together rather than pinned together with nails and dowels. Being completely open, they were rowed (or even paddled) from the open deck, and likely had "ram entries", projections from the bow lowered the resistance of moving through water, making them slightly more hydrodynamic. The first true galleys, the triaconters (literally "thirty-oarers") and penteconters ("fifty-oarers") were developed from these early designs and set the standard for the larger designs that would come later. They were rowed on only one level, which made them fairly slow, likely only 5–5.5 knots. By the 8th century BC the first galleys rowed at two levels had been developed, among the earliest being the two-level penteconters which were considerably shorter than the one-level equivalents, and therefore more maneuverable. They were an estimated 25 m in length and displaced 15 tonnes with 25 pairs of oars. These could have reached an estimated top speed of up to 7.5 knots, making them the first genuine warships when fitted with bow rams. They were equipped with a single square sail on mast set roughly halfway along the length of the hull.[110]

Trireme

 
The stern of the modern trireme replica Olympias with twin side rudders

By the 5th century BC, the first triremes were in use by various powers in the eastern Mediterranean. It had now become a fully developed, highly specialized vessel of war that was capable of high speeds and complex maneuvers. At nearly 40 m in length, displacing almost 50 tonnes, it was more than three times as expensive as a two-level penteconter. A trireme also had an additional mast with a smaller square sail placed near the bow.[111] Up to 170 oarsmen sat on three levels with one oar each that varied slightly in length. To accommodate three levels of oars, rowers sat staggered on three levels. Arrangements of the three levels are believed to have varied, but the most well-documented design made use of a projecting structure, or outrigger, where the oarlock in the form of a thole pin was placed. This allowed the outermost row of oarsmen enough leverage for full strokes that made efficient use of their oars.[112]

 
The Athlit ram, a preserved original warship ram from around 530–270 BC. It weighs nearly half a tonne and was probably fitted to a "five" or a "four".[113]

The first dedicated war galleys fitted with rams were built with a mortise and tenon technique, a so-called shell-first method. In this, the planking of the hull was strong enough to hold the ship together structurally, and was also watertight without the need for caulking. Hulls had sharp bottoms without keelsons in order to support the structure and were reinforced by transverse framing secured with dowels with nails driven through them. To prevent the hull from hogging there was a hypozoma (υπόζωμα = underbelt),[114] a thick, doubled rope that connected bow with stern. It was kept taut to add strength to the construction along its length, but its exact design or the method of tightening is not known.[115] The ram, the primary weapon of ancient galleys from around the 8th to the 4th century, was not attached directly on the hull but to a structure extending from it. This way the ram could twist off if got stuck after ramming rather than breaking the integrity of the hull. The ram fitting consisted of a massive, projecting timber and the ram itself was a thick bronze casting with horizontal blades that could weigh from 400 kg up to 2 tonnes.[111]

Roman era

Galleys from 4th century BC up to the time of the early Roman Empire in the 1st century AD became successively larger. Three levels of oars was the practical upper limit, but it was improved on by making ships longer, broader, and heavier and placing more than one rower per oar. Naval conflict grew more intense and extensive, and by 100 BC galleys with four, five or six rows of oarsmen were commonplace and carried large complements of soldiers and catapults. With high freeboard (up to 3 m) and additional tower structures from which missiles could be shot down onto enemy decks, they were intended to be like floating fortresses.[116] Designs with everything from eight rows of oarsmen and upward were built, but most of them are believed to have been impractical show pieces never used in actual warfare.[117] Ptolemy IV, the Greek pharaoh of Egypt 221–205 BC, is recorded as building a gigantic ship with forty rows of oarsmen, though no specification of its design remains. One suggested design was that of a huge trireme catamaran with up to 14 men per oar and it is assumed that it was intended as a showpiece rather than a practical warship.[118]

With the consolidation of Roman imperial power, the size of both fleets and galleys decreased considerably. The huge polyremes disappeared and the fleet were equipped primarily with triremes and liburnians, compact biremes with 25 pairs of oars that were well suited for patrol duty and chasing down raiders and pirates.[119] In the northern provinces oared patrol boats were employed to keep local tribes in check along the shores of rivers like the Rhine and the Danube.[120] As the need for large warships disappeared, the design of the trireme, the pinnacle of ancient war ship design, fell into obscurity and was eventually forgotten. The last known reference to triremes in battle is dated to 324 at the Battle of the Hellespont. In the late 5th century the Byzantine historian Zosimus declared the knowledge of how to build them to have been long since forgotten.[121]

Middle Ages

The earliest medieval galley specification comes from an order of Charles I of Sicily, in 1275 AD.[122] Overall length 39.30 m, keel length 28.03 m, depth 2.08 m. Hull width 3.67 m. Width between outriggers 4.45 m. 108 oars, most 6.81 m long, some 7.86 m, 2 steering oars 6.03 m long. Foremast and middle mast respectively heights 16.08 m, 11.00 m; circumference both 0.79 m, yard lengths 26.72 m, 17.29 m. Overall deadweight tonnage approximately 80 metric tons. This type of vessel had two, later three, men on a bench, each working his own oar. This vessel had much longer oars than the Athenian trireme which were 4.41 m & 4.66 m long.[123] This type of warship was called galia sottil.[124]

The dromon and the galea

 
14th-century painting of a light galley, from an icon now at the Byzantine and Christian Museum at Athens

The primary warship of the Byzantine navy until the 12th century was the dromon and other similar ship types. Considered an evolution of the Roman liburnian, the term first appeared in the late 5th century, and was commonly used for a specific kind of war-galley by the 6th century.[125] The term dromōn (literally "runner") itself comes from the Greek root drom-(áō), "to run", and 6th-century authors like Procopius are explicit in their references to the speed of these vessels.[126] During the next few centuries, as the naval struggle with the Arabs intensified, heavier versions with two or possibly even three banks of oars evolved.[127]

The accepted view is that the main developments which differentiated the early dromons from the liburnians, and that henceforth characterized Mediterranean galleys, were the adoption of a full deck, the abandonment of rams on the bow in favor of an above-water spur, and the gradual introduction of lateen sails.[128] The exact reasons for the abandonment of the ram are unclear. Depictions of upward-pointing beaks in the 4th-century Vatican Vergil manuscript may well illustrate that the ram had already been replaced by a spur in late Roman galleys.[129] One possibility is that the change occurred because of the gradual evolution of the ancient shell-first construction method, against which rams had been designed, into the skeleton-first method, which produced a stronger and more flexible hull, less susceptible to ram attacks.[130] At least by the early 7th century, the ram's original function had been forgotten.[131]

The dromons that Procopius described were single-banked ships of probably 25 oars per side. Unlike ancient vessels, which used an outrigger, these extended directly from the hull.[132] In the later bireme dromons of the 9th and 10th centuries, the two oar banks were divided by the deck, with the first oar bank was situated below, whilst the second oar bank was situated above deck; these rowers were expected to fight alongside the marines in boarding operations.[133] The overall length of these ships was probably about 32 meters.[134] The stern (prymnē) had a tent that covered the captain's berth;[135] the prow featured an elevated forecastle that acted as a fighting platform and could house one or more siphons for the discharge of Greek fire;[136] and on the largest dromons, there were wooden castles on either side between the masts, providing archers with elevated firing platforms.[137] The bow spur was intended to ride over an enemy ship's oars, breaking them and rendering it helpless against missile fire and boarding actions.[138]

Standardization

From the 12th century, the design of war galleys evolved into the form that would remain largely the same until the building of the last war galleys in the late 18th century. The length to breadth-ratio was a minimum of 8:1. A rectangular telaro, an outrigger, was added to support the oars and the rowers' benches were laid out in a diagonal herringbone pattern angled aft on either side of a central gangway, or corsia.[139] It was based on the form of the galea, the smaller Byzantine galleys, and would be known mostly by the Italian term galea sottile (literally "slender galley"). A second, smaller mast was added sometime in the 13th century and the number of rowers rose from two to three rowers per bench as a standard from the late 13th to the early 14th century.[140] The galee sottili would make up the bulk the main war fleets of every major naval power in the Mediterranean, assisted by the smaller single-masted galiotte, as well as the Christian and Muslim corsairs fleets. Ottoman galleys were very similar in design, though in general smaller, faster under sail, but slower under oars.[141] The standard size of the galley remained stable from the 14th until the early 16th century, when the introduction of naval artillery began to have effects on design and tactics.[142]

 
A Venetian galea sottile from the late 15th century from Vittore Carpaccio's Return of the Ambassadors in the series Legend of Saint Ursula (1497–1498). Note the oars arranged in groups of three according to the alla sensile rowing method.

The traditional two side rudders were complemented with a stern rudder sometime after c. 1400 and eventually the side rudders disappeared altogether.[143] It was also during the 15th century that large artillery pieces were first mounted on galleys. Burgundian records from the mid-15th century describe galleys with some form of guns, but do not specify the size. The first conclusive evidence of a large cannon mounted on a galley comes from a woodcut of a Venetian galley in 1486.[144] The first guns were fixed directly on timbers in the bow and aimed directly forward, a placement that would remain largely unchanged until the galley disappeared from active service in the 19th century.[145]

 
The ubiquitous bow fighting platform (rambade) of early modern galleys. This model is of a 1715 Swedish galley, somewhat smaller than the standard Mediterranean war galley, but still based on the same design.

With the introduction of guns in the bows of galleys, a permanent wooden structure called rambade (French: rambade; Italian: rambata; Spanish: arrumbada) was introduced. The rambade became standard on virtually all galleys in the early 16th century. There were some variations in the navies of different Mediterranean powers, but the overall layout was the same. The forward-aiming battery was covered by a wooden platform which gave gunners a minimum of protection, and functioned as both a staging area for boarding attacks and as a firing platform for on-board soldiers.[146] After its introduction, the rambade became a standard detail on every fighting galley until the very end of galley era in the early 19th century.[147]

In the mid-17th century, galleys reached what has been described as their "final form".[148] Galleys had looked more or less the same for over four centuries and a fairly standardized classification system for different sizes of galleys had been developed by the Mediterranean bureaucracies, based mostly on the number of benches in a vessel.[11] A Mediterranean galley would have 25–26 pairs of oars with five men per oar (c. 250 rowers), 50–100 sailors and 50–100 soldiers for a total of about 500 men. The exceptions were the significantly larger "flagships" (often called lanternas, "lantern galleys") that had 30 pairs of oars and up to seven rowers per oar. The armament consisted of one heavy 24- or 36-pounder gun in the bows flanked by two to four 4- to 12-pounders. Rows of light swivel guns were often placed along the entire length of the galley on the railings for close-quarter defense. The length-to-width ratio of the ships was about 8:1, with two main masts carrying one large lateen sail each. In the Baltic, galleys were generally shorter with a length-to-width ratio from 5:1 to 7:1, an adaptation to the cramped conditions of the Baltic archipelagos.[149]

A single mainmast was standard on most war galleys until c. 1600. A second, shorter mast could be raised temporarily in the bows, but became permanent by the early 17th century. It was stepped slightly to the side to allow for the recoil of the heavy guns; the other was placed roughly in the center of the ship. A third smaller mast further astern, akin to a mizzen mast, was also introduced on large galleys, possibly in the early 17th century, but was standard at least by the early 18th century.[150] Galleys had little room for provisions and depended on frequent resupplying and were often beached at night to rest the crew and cook meals. Where cooking areas were actually present, they consisted of a clay-lined box with a hearth or similar cooking equipment fitted on the vessel in place of a rowing bench, usually on the port (left) side.[151]

Propulsion

Throughout their long history, galleys relied on rowing as the most important means of propulsion. The arrangement of rowers during the 1st millennium BC developed gradually from a single row up to three rows arranged in a complex, staggered seating arrangement. Anything above three levels, however, proved to be physically impracticable. Initially, there was only one rower per oar, but the number steadily increased, with a number of different combinations of rowers per oar and rows of oars. The ancient terms for galleys was based on the numbers of rows or rowers plying the oars, not the number of rows of oars. Today it is best known by a modernized Latin terminology based on numerals with the ending "-reme" from rēmus, "oar". A trireme was a ship with three rows of oarsmen, a quadrireme four, a hexareme six, and so forth. There were warships that ran up to ten or even eleven rows, but anything above six was rare. A huge forty-rowed ship was built during the reign of Ptolemy IV in Egypt. Little is known about its design, but it is assumed to have been an impractical prestige vessel.

Rowing

 
Modern reconstruction of a cross-section of an ancient Greek trireme, showing the three levels of rowers

Ancient rowing was done in a fixed seated position, the most effective rowing position, with rowers facing the stern. A sliding stroke, which provided the strength from both legs as well as the arms, was suggested by earlier historians, but no conclusive evidence has supported it. Practical experiments with the full-scale reconstruction Olympias has shown that there was insufficient space, while moving or rolling seats would have been highly impractical to construct with ancient methods.[152] Rowers in ancient war galleys sat below the upper deck with little view of their surroundings. The rowing was therefore managed by supervisors, and coordinated with pipes or rhythmic chanting.[153] Galleys were highly maneuverable, able to turn on their axis or even to row backward, though it required a skilled and experienced crew.[154] In galleys with an arrangement of three men per oar, all would be seated, but the rower furthest inboard would perform a stand-and-sit stroke, getting up on his feet to push the oar forward, and then sitting down again to pull it back.[154]

The faster a vessel travels, the more energy it uses. Reaching high speed requires energy which a human-powered vessel is incapable of producing. Oar systems generate very low amounts of energy for propulsion (only about 70 W per rower) and the upper limit for rowing in a fixed position is around 10 knots.[155] Ancient war galleys of the kind used in Classical Greece are by modern historians considered to be the most energy-efficient and fastest of galley designs throughout history. A full-scale replica of a 5th-century BC trireme, the Olympias was built 1985–87 and was put through a series of trials to test its performance. It proved that a cruising speed of 7–8 knots could be maintained for an entire day. Sprinting speeds of up to 10 knots were possible, but only for a few minutes and would tire the crew quickly.[156] Ancient galleys were built very light and the original triremes are assumed to never have been surpassed in speed.[157] Medieval galleys are believed to have been considerably slower, especially since they were not built with ramming tactics in mind. A cruising speed of no more than 2–3 knots has been estimated. A sprint speed of up to 7 knots was possible for 20–30 minutes, but risked exhausting the rowers completely.[158]

Rowing in headwinds or even moderately rough weather was difficult as well as exhausting.[159] In high seas, ancient galleys would set sail to run before the wind. They were highly susceptible to high waves, and could become unmanageable if the rowing frame (apostis) came awash. Ancient and medieval galleys are assumed to have sailed only with the wind more or less astern with a top speed of 8–9 knots in fair conditions.[160]

Galley slaves

 
Model of a Venetian three-banked galley rowed alla sensile, with three rowers sharing a bench but handling one oar each

Contrary to the popular image of rowers chained to the oars, conveyed by movies such as Ben Hur, there is no evidence that ancient navies ever made use of condemned criminals or slaves as oarsmen, with the possible exception of Ptolemaic Egypt.[161] Literary evidence indicates that Greek and Roman navies relied on paid labor or ordinary soldiers to man their galleys.[162][163] Slaves were put at the oars only in times of extreme crisis. In some cases, these people were given freedom thereafter, while in others they began their service aboard as free men. Roman merchant vessels (usually sailing vessels) were manned by slaves, sometimes even with slaves as ship's master, but this was seldom the case in merchant galleys.[164]

It was only in the early 16th century that the modern idea of the galley slave became commonplace. Galley fleets as well as the size of individual vessels increased in size, which required more rowers. The number of benches could not be increased without lengthening hulls beyond their structural limits, and more than three oars per bench was not practicable. The demand for more rowers also meant that the relatively limited number of skilled oarsmen could not keep up with the demand of large galley fleets. It became increasingly common to man galleys with convicts or slaves, which required a simpler method of rowing. The older method of employing professional rowers using the alla sensile method (one oar per man, with two to three sharing the same bench) was gradually phased out in favor of rowing a scaloccio, which required less skill.[165] A single large oar was used for each bench, with several rowers working it together and the number of oarsmen per oar rose from three up to five. In some very large command galleys, there could be as many as seven to an oar.[166]

 
An illustration from 1643 showing the layout of rowing benches as well and placement of rowers on a galley with 16 pairs of oars. It also shows a rower at the top of the stroke using the standing rowing technique typical of a scaloccio rowing.

All major Mediterranean powers sentenced criminals to galley service, but initially only in time of war. Christian naval powers such as Spain frequently employed Muslim captives and prisoners of war. The Ottoman navy and its North African corsair allies often put Christian prisoners to the oars, but also mixed volunteers. Spain relied on mostly servile rowers, in great part because its organizational structure was geared toward employing slaves and convicts.[167] Venice was one of few major naval powers that used almost only free rowers, a result of their reliance on alla sensile rowing which required skilled professional rowers. The Knights of Saint John used slaves extensively, as did the Papal States, Florence, and Genoa. North African ghazi corsairs relied almost entirely on Christian slaves for rowers.[168]

Sails

In ancient galleys under sail, most of the moving power came from a single square sail. It was rigged on a mast somewhat forward of the center of the ship with a smaller mast carrying a head sail in the bow. Triangular lateen sails are attested as early as the 2nd century AD, and gradually became the sail of choice for galleys. By the 9th century, lateens were firmly established as part of the standard galley rig. The lateen rig was more complicated and required a larger crew to handle than a square sail rig, but this was not a problem in the heavily manned galleys.[169] Belisarius' Byzantine invasion fleet of 533 was at least partly fitted with lateen sails, making it probable that by the time the lateen had become the standard rig for the dromon,[170] with the traditional square sail gradually falling from use in medieval navigation in the Mediterranean.[171] Unlike a square sail rig, the spar of a lateen sail did not pivot around the mast. To change tacks, the entire spar had to be lifted over the mast and to the other side. Since the spar was often much longer than the mast itself, and not much shorter than the ship itself, it was a complex and time-consuming maneuver.[172]

Armament and tactics

In the earliest times of naval warfare boarding was the only means of deciding a naval engagement, but little to nothing is known about the tactics involved. In the first recorded naval battle in history, the Battle of the Delta, the forces of Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses III won a decisive victory over a force made up of the enigmatic group known as the Sea Peoples. As shown in commemorative reliefs of the battle, Egyptian archers on ships and the nearby shores of the Nile rain down arrows on the enemy ships. At the same time Egyptian galleys engage in boarding action and capsize the ships of the Sea Peoples with ropes attached to grappling hooks thrown into the rigging.[173]

Introduction of the ram

 
The ram bow of the trireme Olympias, a modern full-scale reconstruction of a classical Greek trireme

Around the 8th century BC, ramming began to be employed as war galleys were equipped with heavy bronze rams. Records of the Persian Wars in the early 5th century BC by the Ancient historian Herodotus (c. 484–25 BC) show that by this time ramming tactics had evolved among the Greeks. The formations adapted for ramming warfare could either be in columns in line ahead, one ship following the next, or in a line abreast, with the ships side by side, depending on the tactical situation and the surrounding geography. The primary methods for attack was either to break through the enemy formation or to outflank it.[174] Ramming itself was done by smashing into the rear or side of an enemy ship, punching a hole in the planking. This did not actually sink an ancient galley unless it was heavily laden with cargo and stores. With a normal load, it was buoyant enough to float even with a breached hull. Breaking the enemy's oars was another way of rendering ships immobile, rendering them easier targets. If ramming was not possible or successful, the on-board complement of soldiers would attempt to board and capture the enemy vessel by securing it with grappling irons, accompanied by missile fire with arrows or javelins. Trying to set the enemy ship on fire by hurling incendiary missiles or by pouring the content of fire pots attached to long handles is thought to have been used, especially since smoke below decks would easily disable rowers.[175] Rhodes was the first naval power to employ this weapon, sometime in the 3rd century, and used it to fight off head-on attacks or to frighten enemies into exposing their sides for a ramming attack.[176]

A successful ramming was difficult to achieve; just the right amount of speed and precise maneuvering were required. Fleets that did not have well-drilled, experienced oarsmen and skilled commanders relied more on boarding with superior infantry (such as increasing the complement to 40 soldiers). Ramming attempts were countered by keeping the bow toward the enemy until the enemy crew tired, and then attempting to board as quickly as possible. A double-line formation could be used to achieve a breakthrough by engaging the first line and then rushing the rearguard in to take advantage of weak spots in the enemy's defense. This required superiority in numbers, though, since a shorter front risked being flanked or surrounded.[177]

Boarding prevails

 
The Byzantine fleet repels the Rus' attack on Constantinople in 941. The Byzantine dromons are rolling over the Rus' vessels and smashing their oars with their spurs.

Despite the attempts to counter increasingly heavy ships, ramming tactics were gradually superseded in the last centuries BC by the Macedonians and Romans, both primarily land-based powers. Hand-to-hand fighting with large complements of heavy infantry supported by ship-borne catapults dominated the fighting style during the Roman era, a move that was accompanied by the conversion to heavier ships with larger rowing complements and more men per oar. Though effectively lowering mobility, it meant that less skill was required from individual oarsmen. Fleets thereby became less dependent on rowers with a lifetime of experience at the oar.[33]

By late antiquity, in the 1st centuries AD, ramming tactics had completely disappeared along with the knowledge of the design of the ancient trireme. Medieval galleys instead developed a projection, or "spur", in the bow that was designed to break oars and to act as a boarding platform for storming enemy ships. The only remaining examples of ramming tactics were passing references to attempts to collide with ships in order to destabilize or capsize them.[178]

 
Byzantine ship attacking with Greek fire. Madrid Skylitzes manuscript, 11th century.

The Byzantine navy, the largest Mediterranean war fleet throughout most of the Early Middle Ages, employed crescent formations with the flagship in the center and the heavier ships at the horns of the formation, in order to turn the enemy's flanks. Similar tactics are believed to have been employed by the Arab fleets they frequently fought from the 7th century onward. The Byzantines were the first to employ Greek fire, a highly effective incendiary liquid, as a naval weapon. It could be fired through a metal tube, or siphon, mounted in the bows, similar to a modern flame thrower. Greek fire was similar to napalm and was a key to several major Byzantine victories. By 835, the weapon had spread to the Arabs, who equipped harraqas, "fireships", with it. The initial stages in naval battles was an exchanges of missiles, ranging from combustible projectiles to arrows, caltrops, and javelins. The aim was not to sink ships, but to deplete the ranks of the enemy crews before the boarding commenced, which decided the outcome. Once the enemy strength was judged to have been reduced sufficiently, the fleets closed in, the ships grappled each other, and the marines and upper bank oarsmen boarded the enemy vessel and engaged in hand-to-hand combat.[178] Byzantine dromons had pavesades, racks along the railings, on which marines could hang their shields, providing protection to the deck crew.[179] Larger ships also had wooden castles on either side between the masts, which allowed archers to shoot from an elevated firing position.[137]

 
Battle between Venetian and Holy Roman fleets; detail of fresco by Spinello Aretino 1407–1408

Later medieval navies continued to use similar tactics, with the line abreast formation as standard. As galleys were intended to be fought from the bows, and were at their weakest along the sides, especially in the middle. The crescent formation employed by the Byzantines continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages. It would allow the wings of the fleet to crash their bows straight into the sides of the enemy ships at the edge of the formation.[180]

Roger of Lauria (c. 1245–1305) was a successful medieval naval tactician who fought for the Aragon navy against French Angevin fleets in the War of the Sicilian Vespers. At the Battle of Malta in July 1283, he lured out Angevin galleys that were beached stern-first by openly challenging them. Attacking them in a strong defensive position head-on would have been very dangerous since it offered good cohesion, allowed rowers to escape ashore and made it possible to reinforce weak positions by transferring infantry along the shore. He also employed skilled crossbowmen and almogavars, light infantry, that were more nimbler in ship-to-ship actions than heavily armed and armored French soldiers.[181] At the Battle of the Gulf of Naples in 1284, his forces launched clay cooking pots filled with soap before attacking; when the pots broke against the enemy decks, they became perilously slippery and difficult for heavy infantry to keep their feet on.[182]

Gun galleys

The earliest guns were of large calibers, and were initially of wrought iron, which made them weak compared to cast bronze guns that would become standard in the 16th century. They were at first fixed directly on timbers in the bow, aiming directly forward. This placement would remain largely unchanged until the galley disappeared from active service in the 19th century.[145] The introduction of heavy guns and small arms did not change tactics considerably. If anything, it accentuated the bow as the offensive weapon, being both a staging area for boarders and the given position for small arms and cannons. The galley was capable of outperforming sailing vessel in early battles. It retained a distinct tactical advantage even after the initial introduction of naval artillery because of the ease with which it could be brought to bear upon an opposing vessel.[183]

 
Contemporary depiction of the Battle of Lepanto in 1571 that shows the strict formations of the opposing fleets. Fresco in the Gallery of Maps in Vatican Museum.

In large-scale galley-to-galley engagements, tactics remained essentially the same until the end of the 16th century. Cannons and small firearms were introduced around the 14th century, but did not have immediate effects on tactics; the same basic crescent formation in line abreast that was employed at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571 was used by the Byzantine fleet almost a millennium earlier.[184] Artillery on early gun galleys was not used as a long-range standoff weapon against other gun-armed ships. The maximum distance at which contemporary cannons were effective, c. 500 m (1600 ft), could be covered by a galley in about two minutes, much faster than the reload time of any heavy artillery. Gun crews would therefore hold their fire until the last possible moment, somewhat similar to infantry tactics in the pre-industrial era of short range firearms.[185] The weak points of a galley remained the sides and especially the rear, the command center. Unless one side managed to outmaneuver the other, battle would be met with ships crashing into each other head on. Once fighting began with ships locking on to one another bow to bow, the fighting would be fought over the front line ships. Unless a galley was completely overrun by an enemy boarding party, fresh troops could be fed into the fight from reserve vessels in the rear.[186]

Ceremonial symbolism

 
The Galley Subtle, one of the very few Mediterranean-style galleys employed by the English. This illustration is from the Anthony Roll (c. 1546) and was intended as its centerpiece.

Galleys were used for purely ceremonial purposes by many rulers and states. In early modern Europe, galleys enjoyed a level of prestige that sailing vessels did not enjoy. Galleys had from an early stage been commanded by the leaders of land forces, and fought with tactics adapted from land warfare. As such, they enjoyed the prestige associated with land battles, the ultimate achievement of a high-standing noble or king. In the Baltic, the Swedish king Gustav I, the founder of the modern Swedish state, showed particular interest in galleys, as was befitting a Renaissance prince. Whenever traveling by sea, Gustav, the court, royal bureaucrats, and the royal bodyguard would travel by galley.[187] Around the same time, English king Henry VIII had high ambitions to live up to the reputation of the omnipotent Renaissance ruler and also had a few Mediterranean-style galleys built (and even manned them with slaves), though the English navy relied mostly on sailing ships at the time.[98]

Despite the rising importance of sailing warships, galleys were more closely associated with land warfare, and the prestige associated with it. British naval historian Nicholas Rodger has described this as display of "the supreme symbol of royal power ... derived from its intimate association with armies, and consequently with princes".[188] This was put to perhaps its greatest effect by the French "Sun King", Louis XIV, in the form of a dedicated galley corps. Louis and the French state created a tool and symbol of royal authority that did little fighting, but was a potent extension of absolutist ambitions. Galleys were built to scale for the royal flotilla at the Grand Canal at the Gardens of Versailles for the amusement of the court.[189] The royal galleys patrolled the Mediterranean, forcing ships of other states to salute the King's banner, convoyed ambassadors and cardinals, and obediently participating in naval parades and royal pageantry. Historian Paul Bamford described the galleys as vessels that "must have appealed to military men and to aristocratic officers ... accustomed to being obeyed and served".[190]

 
Gouache of a late 17th-century French royal galley. The vessel is richly decorated with red and blue damask, brocade, and velvet for the stern canopy and flags, and carved gilded ornaments on railings, outrigger, and hull.

Sentencing criminals, political dissenters and religious deviants as galley rowers also turned the galley corps into a large, feared, and cost-effective prison system.[191] French Protestants were particularly ill-treated at the oar and though they were only a small minority, their experiences came to dominate the legacy of the king's galleys. In 1909, French author Albert Savine (1859–1927) wrote that "[a]fter the Bastille, the galleys were the greatest horror of the old regime".[192] Long after convicts stopped serving in the galleys, and even after the reign of Napoleon, the term galérien ("galley rower") remained a symbolic general term for forced labor and convicts serving harsh sentences.[193]

Being a galley rower did not carry such stigma at Baltic, where galley rowers were conscripts: rather they considered themselves as marine soldiers. The main building of the Finnish Naval Academy at Suomenlinna, Helsinki bears the nickname Kivikaleeri ("Stone Galley") as a legacy of the era.

Surviving examples

 

The Istanbul Naval Museum contains the galley Tarihi Kadırga, built in the period between the reigns of Sultans Murad III (1574–1595) and Mehmed IV (1648–1687).[194] It is the only surviving original galley in the world,[195] and has the world's oldest continuously maintained wooden hull.[196] She was the personal galley of the sultan, and remained in service until 1839.

Reconstructions

A 1971 reconstruction of the Real, the flagship of John of Austria in the Battle of Lepanto (1571), is in the Museu Marítim in Barcelona. The ship was 60 m long and 6.2 m wide, had a draught of 2.1 m, weighing 239 tons empty, was propelled by 290 rowers, and carried about 400 crew and fighting soldiers at Lepanto. She was substantially larger than the typical galleys of her time.

Archaeological finds

  • In 1965, the remains of a small Venetian galley (fusta) sunk in 1509 were found in Lake Garda, Italy. The vessel had been burned and only the lower hull remained.[200]
  • In the mid-1990s, a sunken medieval galley was found close to the island of San Marco in Boccalama, in the Venice Lagoon.[201] The hull has been dated, from the context and the C-14 analysis, between the late 13th and early 14th century. The excavation and the photogrammetric survey (photogrammetry) and 3D laser scanner of this important testimony of medieval nautical archaeology has started in 2001 through two complex executive phases.[202] The stratigraphic excavation of the wreck was in fact performed entirely underwater, according to the archaeological methodologies. The survey of the hull was instead realized after the setting in dry the entire medieval perimeter of the submerged island. This operation took place through the infixation of a continuous barrier consisting of sheet piles and the use of water pumps. This long excavation and documentation campaign was directed by underwater archaeologist Marco D'Agostino and, as deputy director, by his colleague Stefano Medas. The lower hull is mostly intact. It was not recovered due to high costs.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Pryor (2002), pp. 86–87; Anderson (1962), pp. 37–39
  2. ^ Henry George Liddell & Robert Scott Galeos 5 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine, A Greek-English Lexicon
  3. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (2nd edition, 1989), "galley"
  4. ^ See for example Svenska Akademiens ordbok, "galeja 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine" or "galär 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine", and Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal, "galeye 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine"
  5. ^ Anderson (1962), pp. 1, 42; Lehmann (1984), p. 12
  6. ^ The meaning of the word "banked", as in "single banked", "double banked" is different in the context of galleys from the propulsion of small boats by oar. See Rowing#Forward-facing systems for an explanation of the small boat terminology.
  7. ^ Casson (1971), pp. 53–56
  8. ^ Murray (2012), p. 3
  9. ^ Casson, Lionel, "Merchant Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 123
  10. ^ Rodger (1997), pp. 66–68
  11. ^ a b Glete (1993), p. 81
  12. ^ Winfield (2009), pp. 116–118
  13. ^ Karl Heinz Marquardt, "The Fore and Aft Rigged Warship" in Gardiner & Lavery (1992), p. 64
  14. ^ Mooney (1969), p. 516
  15. ^ Blomfield, R. Massie (January 1912). "Man-of-War Boats – II". The Mariner's Mirror. 2 (1): 7–9. doi:10.1080/00253359.1912.10654564.
  16. ^ Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 10
  17. ^ a b Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 11–12
  18. ^ a b Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 21–23
  19. ^ Casson (1971), pp. 53–60
  20. ^ Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 13–18
  21. ^ Casson, Lionel, "Merchant Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 117–121
  22. ^ Casson (1971), pp. 68–69
  23. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), p. 25
  24. ^ Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 28–34
  25. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov, pp. 32–35
  26. ^ Casson (1991), p. 87
  27. ^ Casson (1991), pp. 30–31
  28. ^ Casson (1991), pp. 44–46
  29. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov, (2000), pp. 27–32
  30. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), pp. 38–41
  31. ^ D.B. Saddington (2011) [2007]. "Classes: the Evolution of the Roman Imperial Fleets 7 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine," in Paul Erdkamp (ed), A Companion to the Roman Army, 201–217. Malden, Oxford, Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1405121538. Plate 12.2 on p. 204.
  32. ^ Coarelli, Filippo (1987), I Santuari del Lazio in età repubblicana. NIS, Rome, pp. 35–84.
  33. ^ a b Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), pp. 48–49
  34. ^ Morrison, John, "Hellenistic Oared Warships 399–31 BC" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 66–67
  35. ^ Casson, Lionel, "Merchant Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 119–123
  36. ^ Rankov, Boris, "Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 78–80
  37. ^ Rankov, Boris, "Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 80–81
  38. ^ Rankov, Boris, "Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 82–85
  39. ^ Rodger, (1997), pp. 64–65
  40. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 53–55.
  41. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 96–97
  42. ^ Unger (1980), p. 80
  43. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 75–76
  44. ^ Pirenne, Mohammed and Charlemagne; the thesis appears in chapters 1–2 of Medieval Cities (1925)
  45. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 40, 47
  46. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 102–104
  47. ^ Casson, Lionel, "Merchant Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 123–126
  48. ^ Glete (2000), p. 2
  49. ^ Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 105–106
  50. ^ Pryor (1992), pp. 64–69
  51. ^ Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 107
  52. ^ Braudel, The Perspective of the World, vol. III of Civilization and Capitalism (1979) 1984:126
  53. ^ Higgins, Courtney Rosali (2012) The Venetian Galley of Flanders: From Medieval (2-Dimensional) Treatises to 21st Century (3-Dimensional) Model. Master's thesis, Texas A&M University [1] 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  54. ^ Fernand Braudel, The Mediterranean in the Age of Philip II I, 302.
  55. ^ Pryor (1992), p. 57
  56. ^ Mallett (1967)
  57. ^ Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 109–111
  58. ^ Friel, Ian, "Oars, Sails and Guns: the English and War at Sea c. 1200–c. 1500" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 70
  59. ^ Glete (2000) p. 18
  60. ^ Glete, (2000) p. 23
  61. ^ Glete, (2000) p. 28
  62. ^ Guilmartin (1974) p. 252
  63. ^ Glete (1993), p. 114
  64. ^ Guilmartin (1974), p. 101
  65. ^ Glete (1993), pp. 114–115
  66. ^ Hanson, Victor Davis (2007). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0307425188. from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  67. ^ Glete (2000), pp. 154, 163
  68. ^ Glete (2000), pp. 156, 158–159
  69. ^ Bamford (1973), p. 12; Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 113–114
  70. ^ a b Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 112
  71. ^ Bamford (1973), p. 12
  72. ^ Mott, Lawrence V., "Iberian Naval Power, 1000–1650" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 113–114
  73. ^ Goodman (1997), pp. 11–13
  74. ^ Manguin, Pierre-Yves (1993). "The Vanishing Jong: Insular Southeast Asian Fleets in Trade and War " in Reid (1993), pp. 210–211
  75. ^ Manguin, Pierre-Yves (2012). "Lancaran, Ghurab and Ghali: Mediterranean impact on war vessels in Early Modern Southeast Asia" in Wade & Li (2012), p. 166
  76. ^ See especially Rodger (1996)
  77. ^ Glete, Jan, "Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003) p. 27
  78. ^ The British naval historian Nicholas Rodger describes this as a "crisis in naval warfare" which eventually led to the development of the galleon, which combined ahead-firing capabilities, heavy broadside guns and a considerable increase in maneuverability by introduction of more advanced sailing rigs; Rodger, Nicholas A.M., "The New Atlantic: Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 245. For more detailed arguments concerning the development of broadside armament, see Rodger (1996).
  79. ^ Glete, Jan, "Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003) p. 144
  80. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 264–266
  81. ^ Guilmartin (1974), p. 254
  82. ^ Guilmartin (1974), p. 57
  83. ^ Glete, Jan, "Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003) pp. 32–33
  84. ^ Glete (2000), p. 183
  85. ^ a b Jan Glete, "The Oared Warship" in Gardiner & Lavery (1992), p. 99
  86. ^ Rodger, Nicholas A.M., "The New Atlantic: Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 170
  87. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 14–18
  88. ^ Figures from Glete (1993), p. 251 and focus on standard war galleys and larger flagship galleys, but excludes galeasses. Venetian and Ottoman figures are approximates. Figures for France, Malta, the Papal States, Tuscany are more precise, but are less exact for certain periods.
  89. ^ Bamford (1974), p. 52
  90. ^ Bamford (1974), p. 45
  91. ^ a b Lehmann (1984), p. 12
  92. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 272–73
  93. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 23–25
  94. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 277–278
  95. ^ Bamford, (1974), pp. 272–273; Anderson, (1962), pp. 71–73
  96. ^ Glete (1992), p. 99
  97. ^ Rodger (1997), pp. 208–212
  98. ^ a b John Bennel, "The Oared Vessels" in Knighton & Loades (2000), pp. 35–37.
  99. ^ Rodger, Nicholas A.M., "The New Atlantic: Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 230–230; see also R. C. Anderson, Naval Wars in the Baltic, pp. 177–178
  100. ^ Glete, Jan, "Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), pp. 224–225
  101. ^ Anderson (1962), pp. 91–93; Berg, "Skärgårdsflottans fartyg" in Norman (2000) p. 51
  102. ^ Glete, "Den ryska skärgårdsflottan" in Norman (2000), p. 81
  103. ^ Anderson (1962), p. 95
  104. ^ Bondioli, Mauro, Burlet, René & Zysberg, André, "Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Medieval and Later Galleys", in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 205
  105. ^ Jan Glete, "Den ryska skärgårdsflottan: Myt och verklighet" in Norman (2000), pp. 86–88
  106. ^ Based on Glete (1993), pp. 707–709. Russian and Swedish figures are both approximates. Baltic galleys were of similar construction as Mediterranean equivalents, but usually smaller. Few of them had more than 22 pairs of benches and many fewer than 16.
  107. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 127
  108. ^ This flower-inspired stern detail would later be widely used by both Greek and Roman ships.
  109. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 41–42
  110. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 136–137
  111. ^ a b Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 133–134; Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), pp. 165–167
  112. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 137–138
  113. ^ Casson (1991), pp. 135–136
  114. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 27 April 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  115. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 131–132
  116. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 138–140
  117. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), p. 77
  118. ^ Shaw(1995), pp. 164–165
  119. ^ Hocker, Frederick M., "Late Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic Galleys and Fleets" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 88
  120. ^ Rankov, Boris, "Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 80–83
  121. ^ Rankov, Boris, "Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 85
  122. ^ See both Bass and Pryor
  123. ^ Morrison p. 269
  124. ^ Landström
  125. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 123–125
  126. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 125–126
  127. ^ Pryor, John H."From dromon to galea: Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500–1300" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 102
  128. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), p. 127
  129. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 138–140
  130. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 145–147, 152
  131. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 134–135
  132. ^ Pryor, John H."From dromon to galea: Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500–1300" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 103–104
  133. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 232, 255, 276
  134. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 205, 291
  135. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), p. 215
  136. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), p. 203
  137. ^ a b Pryor, John H."From dromon to galea: Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500–1300" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 104
  138. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 143–144
  139. ^ Anderson (1962), pp. 52, 54–55
  140. ^ Pryor (1992), p. 64
  141. ^ Pryor (1992), pp. 66–69
  142. ^ Anderson (1962), pp. 55–56
  143. ^ Pryor refers to claims that stern rudders evolved by the Byzantines and Arabs as early as the 9th century, but refutes it due to lack of evidence. Anderson (1962), pp. 59–60; Pryor (1992), p. 61.
  144. ^ Lehmann (1984), p. 31
  145. ^ a b Guilmartin (1974), p. 216
  146. ^ Guilmartin (1974), p. 200
  147. ^ Lehmann (1984), pp. 32–33
  148. ^ Jan Glete, "The Oared Warship" in Gardiner & Lavery (1992), p. 98
  149. ^ Jan Glete, "The Oared Warship" in Gardiner & Lavery (1992), pp. 98–100
  150. ^ Anderson (1962), p. 17
  151. ^ Lehmann (1984), p. 22
  152. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov, The Athenian Trireme, pp. 246–247; Shaw, J. T., "Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 168–169
  153. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov, The Athenian Trireme, pp. 249–52
  154. ^ a b Morrison, Coates & Rankov, The Athenian Trireme, pp. 246–247
  155. ^ Coates 1995, pp. 127–128
  156. ^ Shaw, J. T., "Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 169
  157. ^ Shaw, J. T., "Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), p. 163
  158. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 210–211
  159. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov, The Athenian Trireme, p. 248
  160. ^ Pryor (1992), pp. 71–75
  161. ^ Casson (1971), pp. 325–326
  162. ^ Rachel L. Sargent, "The Use of Slaves by the Athenians in Warfare", Classical Philology, Vol. 22, No. 3 (Jul. 1927), pp. 264–279
  163. ^ Lionel Casson, "Galley Slaves", Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Vol. 97 (1966), pp. 35–44
  164. ^ Unger (1980), p. 36
  165. ^ From Italian remo di scaloccio from scala, "ladder; staircase"; Anderson (1962), p. 69
  166. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 226–227
  167. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 109–112
  168. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 114–119
  169. ^ Unger (1980), pp. 47–49.
  170. ^ Basch (2001), p. 64
  171. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), pp. 153–159
  172. ^ Pryor (1992), p. 42
  173. ^ Wachsmann, Shelley, "Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 28–34, 72
  174. ^ Morrison, Coates & Rankov (2000), pp. 42–43, 92–93
  175. ^ Coates, John, "The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 133–135
  176. ^ Casson (1991), p. 139
  177. ^ Casson (1991), pp. 90–91
  178. ^ a b Hocker, Frederick M., "Late Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic Galleys and Fleets" in Morrison & Gardiner (1995), pp. 95, 98–99.
  179. ^ Pryor & Jeffreys (2006), p. 282
  180. ^ Pryor (1983), pp. 193–194
  181. ^ Pryor (1983), pp. 184–188
  182. ^ Pryor (1983), p. 194
  183. ^ Rose (2002), pp. 133
  184. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 157–158
  185. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 199–200
  186. ^ Guilmartin (1974), pp. 248–249
  187. ^ Jan Glete, "Vasatidens galärflottor" in Norman (2000), pp. 39, 42
  188. ^ Rodger, Nicholas A.M., "The New Atlantic: Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century" in Hattendorf & Unger (2003), p. 237
  189. ^ For more information on the royal flotilla of Louis XIV, see Amélie Halna du Fretay, "La flottille du Grand Canal de Versailles à l'époque de Louis XIV: diversité, technicité et prestige 11 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine" (in French)
  190. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 24–25
  191. ^ Bamford (1974), pp. 275–278
  192. ^ Bamford (1973), pp. 11–12
  193. ^ Bamford (1973), p. 282
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  200. ^ Scandurra, Enrico (1972), pp. 209–210
  201. ^ AA.VV., 2003, La galea di San Marco in Boccalama. Valutazioni scientifiche per un progetto di recupero (ADA – Saggi 1), Venice
  202. ^ D'Agostino – Medas, (2003), Excavation and Recording of the medieval Hulls at San Marco in Boccalama (Venice), the INA Quarterly (Institute of Nautical Archaeology), 30, 1, Spring 2003, pp. 22–28

References

  • Anderson, Roger Charles, Oared fighting ships: From classical times to the coming of steam. London. 1962.
  • Bamford, Paul W., Fighting ships and prisons: the Mediterranean Galleys of France in the Age of Louis XIV. Cambridge University Press, London. 1974. ISBN 0816606552
  • Basch, L. & Frost, H. "Another Punic wreck off Sicily: its ram" in International journal of Nautical Archaeology vol 4.2, 1975. pp. 201–228
  • Bass, George F. (editor), A History of Seafaring, Thames & Hudson, 1972
  • Gardiner, Robert & Lavery, Brian (editors), The Line of Battle: Sailing Warships 1650–1840. Conway Maritime Press, London. 1992. ISBN 0851775616
  • Casson, Lionel, "Galley Slaves" in Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Vol. 97 (1966), pp. 35–44
  • Casson, Lionel, Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World, Princeton University Press, 1971
  • Casson, Lionel, The Ancient Mariners: Seafarers and Sea Fighters of the Mediterranean in Ancient Times Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. 1991. ISBN 0691068364
  • D'Agostino, Marco & Medas, Stefano, Excavation and Recording of the medieval Hulls at San Marco in Boccalama (Venice), the INA Quarterly (Institute of Nautical Archaeology), 30, 1, Spring 2003, pp. 22–28
  • Glete, Jan, Navies and nations: Warships, navies, and state building in Europe and America, 1500–1860. Almqvist & Wiksell International, Stockholm. 1993. ISBN 9122015655
  • Glete, Jan, Warfare at Sea, 1500–1650: Maritime Conflicts and the Transformation of Europe. Routledge, London. 2000. ISBN 0415214556
  • Guilmartin, John Francis, Gunpowder and Galleys: Changing Technology and Mediterranean Warfare at Sea in the Sixteenth Century. Cambridge University Press, London. 1974. ISBN 0521202728
  • Hattendorf, John B. & Unger, Richard W. (editors), War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Woodbridge, Suffolk. 2003. ISBN 0851159036 War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
  • Knighton, C.S. and Loades, David M., The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with related documents. Ashgate Publishing, Aldershot. 2000. ISBN 0754600947
  • Lehmann, L. Th., Galleys in the Netherlands. Meulenhoff, Amsterdam. 1984. ISBN 9029018542
  • Morrison, John S. & Gardiner, Robert (editors), The Age of the Galley: Mediterranean Oared Vessels Since Pre-Classical Times. Conway Maritime, London, 1995. ISBN 0851775543
  • Mallett, Michael E. (1967) The Florentine Galleys in the Fifteenth Century with the Diary of Luca di Maso degli Albizzi, Captain of the Galleys 1429–1430. Clarendon Press, Oxford. 1967
  • Mooney, James L. (editor), Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships: Volume 4. Naval Historical Center, Washington. 1969.
  • Morrison, John S., Coates, John F. & Rankov, Boris,The Athenian Trireme: the History and Reconstruction of An Ancient Greek Warship. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 2000. ISBN 0521564565
  • Murray, William (2012) The Age of Titans: The Rise and Fall of the Great Hellenistic Navies. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 978-0195388640
  • Norman, Hans (editor), Skärgårdsflottan: uppbyggnad, militär användning och förankring i det svenska samhället 1700–1824. Historiska media, Lund. 2000. ISBN 9188930505 (in Swedish)
  • Pryor, John H., "The naval battles of Roger of Lauria" in Journal of Medieval History 9. Amsterdam. 1983; pp. 179–216
  • Pryor, John H., Geography, technology and war: Studies in the maritime history of the Mediterranean 649–1571. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 1992. ISBN 0521428920 Geography, Technology, and War: Studies in the Maritime History of the Mediterranean, 649-1571
  • Reid, Anthony (editor), Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era: Trade, Power, and Belief. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY 1993. ISBN 978-1501732171
  • Rodger, Nicholas A.M., "The Development of Broadside Gunnery, 1450–1650." Mariner's Mirror 82 (1996), pp. 301–324.
  • Rodger, Nicholas A.M., The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain 660–1649. W.W. Norton & Company, New York. 1997. ISBN 039304579X
  • Rose, Susan, Medieval Naval Warfare, 1000–1500.Routledge. London. 2002. ISBN 978-0415239776
  • Rodgers, William Ledyard, Naval Warfare Under Oars: 4th to 16th Centuries, Naval Institute Press, 1940.
  • Unger, Richard W. The Ship in Medieval Economy 600–1600 Croom Helm, London. 1980. ISBN 085664949X
  • Wade, Geoff & Li, Tana Anthony Reid and the Study of the Southeast Asian Past. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore. 2012 ISBN 978-9814311960
  • Winfield, Rif (2009) British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1603–1714: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth, Barnsley. ISBN 978-1848320406

External links

  • "Galley" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Rafael Rebolo Gómez – "The Carthaginian navy"., 2005, Treballs del Museu Arqueologic d'Eivissa e Formentera. (in Spanish)
  • "Some Engineering Concepts applied to Ancient Greek Trireme Warships", John Coates, University of Oxford, The 18th Jenkin Lecture, 1 October 2005.

galley, other, uses, disambiguation, galley, type, ship, that, propelled, mainly, oars, galley, characterized, long, slender, hull, shallow, draft, freeboard, clearance, between, gunwale, virtually, types, galleys, sails, that, could, used, favorable, winds, h. For other uses see Galley disambiguation A galley is a type of ship that is propelled mainly by oars The galley is characterized by its long slender hull shallow draft and low freeboard clearance between sea and gunwale Virtually all types of galleys had sails that could be used in favorable winds but human effort was always the primary method of propulsion This allowed galleys to navigate independently of winds and currents The galley originated among the seafaring civilizations around the Mediterranean Sea in the late second millennium BC and remained in use in various forms until the early 19th century in warfare trade and piracy A model of a Maltese design typical of the 16th century the last great era of the war galley in the Mediterranean SeaGalleys were the warships used by the early Mediterranean naval powers including the Greeks Illyrians Phoenicians and Romans They remained the dominant types of vessels used for war and piracy in the Mediterranean Sea until the last decades of the 16th century As warships galleys carried various types of weapons throughout their long existence including rams catapults and cannons but also relied on their large crews to overpower enemy vessels in boarding actions They were the first ships to effectively use heavy cannons as anti ship weapons As highly efficient gun platforms they forced changes in the design of medieval seaside fortresses as well as refinement of sailing warships Galleys were the most common warships in the Atlantic Ocean during the Middle Ages and later saw limited use in the Caribbean the Philippines and the Indian Ocean in the early modern period mostly as patrol craft to combat pirates From the mid 16th century galleys were in intermittent use in the Baltic Sea with its short distances and extensive archipelagoes The zenith of galley usage in warfare came in the late 16th century with battles like that at Lepanto in 1571 one of the largest naval battles ever fought By the 17th century however sailing ships and hybrid ships like the xebec displaced galleys in naval warfare There was a minor revival of galley warfare in the 18th century in the wars among Russia Sweden and Denmark Contents 1 Definition and terminology 2 History 2 1 The first warships 2 2 Hellenistic era and rise of the Republic 2 3 Roman Imperial era 2 4 Middle Ages 2 4 1 Eastern Mediterranean 2 4 2 Western Mediterranean 2 5 Development of the true galley 2 6 Transition to sailing ships 2 7 Introduction of guns 2 8 Mediterranean decline 2 9 Use in northern Europe 2 9 1 Baltic revival and decline 3 Construction 3 1 Trireme 3 2 Roman era 3 3 Middle Ages 3 3 1 The dromon and the galea 3 4 Standardization 4 Propulsion 4 1 Rowing 4 2 Galley slaves 4 3 Sails 5 Armament and tactics 5 1 Introduction of the ram 5 2 Boarding prevails 5 3 Gun galleys 6 Ceremonial symbolism 7 Surviving examples 7 1 Reconstructions 7 2 Archaeological finds 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksDefinition and terminology EditThe term galley derives from the Medieval Greek galea a smaller version of the dromon the prime warship of the Byzantine navy 1 The origin of the Greek word is unclear but could possibly be related to galeos the Greek word for dogfish shark 2 The word galley has been attested in English from c 1300 3 and has been used in most European languages from around 1500 both as a general term for oared warships and from the Middle Ages and onward more specifically for the Mediterranean style vessel 4 It was only from the 16th century that a unified galley concept came in use Before that particularly in antiquity there was a wide variety of terms used for different types of galleys In modern historical literature galley is occasionally used as a general term for various types of oared vessels larger than boats though the true galley is defined as the ships belonging to the Mediterranean tradition 5 The English built Charles Galley a galley frigate built in the 1670s It was not a true galley but the term still became part of its name due to its oars Ancient galleys were named according to the number of oars the number of banks of oars or lines of rowers The terms are based on contemporary language use combined with more recent compounds of Greek and Latin words The earliest Greek single banked 6 galleys are called triaconters from triakontoroi thirty oars and penteconters pentekontoroi fifty oars 7 For later galleys with more than one row of oars the terminology is based on Latin numerals with the suffix reme from remus oar A monoreme has one bank of oars a bireme two and a trireme three Since the maximum banks of oars was three any expansion above that did not refer to additional banks of oars but of additional rowers for every oar Quinquereme quintus remus was literally a five oar but actually meant that there were several rowers to certain banks of oars which made up five lines of oar handlers For simplicity they have by many modern scholars been referred to as fives sixes eights elevens etc Anything above six or seven rows of rowers was not common though even a very exceptional forty is attested in contemporary source Any galley with more than three or four lines of rowers is often referred to as a polyreme 8 Classicist Lionel Casson has applied the term galley to oared Viking ships of the Early and High Middle Ages both their well known longship warships and their less familiar merchant galleys 9 Oared military vessels built on the British Isles in the 11th to 13th centuries were based on Scandinavian designs but were nevertheless referred to as galleys Many of them were similar to birlinns a smaller version of the Highland galley close relatives of longship types like the snekkja By the 14th century they were replaced with balingers in southern Britain while longship type Highland and Irish galleys and birlinns remained in use throughout the Middle Ages in northern Britain 10 Watercolor of United States ships at the Battle of Valcour Island depicting several row galleys similar function but based on very different designs from Mediterranean galleys Medieval and early modern galleys used a different terminology from their ancient predecessors Names were based on the changing designs that evolved after the ancient rowing schemes were forgotten Among the most important is the Byzantine dromon the predecessor to the Italian galea sottila This was the first step toward the final form of the Mediterranean war galley As galleys became an integral part of an advanced early modern system of warfare and state administration they were divided into a number of ranked grades based on the size of the vessel and the number of its crew The most basic types were the following large commander lantern galleys half galleys galiots fustas brigantines and fregatas Naval historian Jan Glete has described as a sort of predecessor of the later rating system of the Royal Navy and other sailing fleets in Northern Europe 11 The French navy and the Royal Navy built a series of galley frigates from c 1670 1690 that were small two decked sailing cruisers with a set of oarports on the lower deck The three British galley frigates also had distinctive names James Galley Charles Galley and Mary Galley 12 In the late 18th century the term galley was in some contexts used to describe minor oared gun armed vessels which did not fit into the category of the classic Mediterranean type In North America during American Revolutionary War and other wars with France and Britain the early US Navy and other navies built vessels that were called galleys or row galleys though they were actually brigantines or Baltic gunboats 13 This type of description was more a characterization of their military role and was in part due to technicalities in administration and naval financing 14 In the latter part of the 19th century the Royal Navy term for the gig a ship s boat optimised for propulsion by oar reserved for the captain s use was very strictly galley even though it was issued to the ship by the navy dockyard as a gig 15 History EditAmong the earliest known watercraft were canoes made from hollowed out logs the earliest ancestors of galleys Their narrow hulls required them to be paddled in a fixed sitting position facing forward a less efficient form of propulsion than rowing with proper oars facing backward Seagoing paddled craft have been attested by finds of terracotta sculptures and lead models in the region of the Aegean Sea from the 3rd millennium BC However archaeologists believe that the Stone Age colonization of islands in the Mediterranean around 8 000 BC required fairly large seaworthy vessels that were paddled and possibly even equipped with sails 16 The first evidence of more complex craft that are considered to prototypes for later galleys comes from Ancient Egypt during the Old Kingdom c 2700 2200 BC Under the rule of pharaoh Pepi I 2332 2283 BC these vessels were used to transport troops to raid settlements along the Levantine coast and to ship back slaves and timber 17 During the reign of Hatshepsut c 1479 57 BC Egyptian galleys traded in luxuries on the Red Sea with the enigmatic Land of Punt as recorded on wall paintings at the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el Bahari 18 Assyrian warship a bireme with pointed bow from 700 BC Shipbuilders probably Phoenician a seafaring people who lived on the southern and eastern coasts of the Mediterranean were the first to create the two level galley that would be widely known under its Greek name dieres or bireme 19 Even though the Phoenicians were among the most important naval civilizations in early classical antiquity little detailed evidence have been found concerning the types of ships they used The best depictions found so far have been small highly stylized images on seals which depict crescent shape vessels equipped with one mast and banks of oars Colorful frescoes on the Minoan settlement on Santorini c 1600 BC show more detailed pictures of vessels with ceremonial tents on deck in a procession Some of these are rowed but others are paddled with men laboriously bent over the railings This has been interpreted as a possible ritual reenactment of more ancient types of vessels alluding to a time before rowing was invented but little is otherwise known about the use and design of Minoan ships 20 In the earliest days of the galley there was no clear distinction between ships of trade and war other than their actual usage River boats plied the waterways of ancient Egypt during the Old Kingdom 2700 2200 BC and seagoing galley like vessels were recorded bringing back luxuries from across the Red Sea in the reign of pharaoh Hatshepsut Fitting rams to the bows of vessels sometime around the 8th century BC resulted in a distinct split in the design of warships and set trade vessels apart at least when it came to use in naval warfare The Phoenicians used galleys for transports that were less elongated carried fewer oars and relied more on sails Carthaginian galley wrecks found off Sicily that date to the 3rd or 2nd century BC had a length to breadth ratio of 6 1 proportions that fell between the 4 1 of sailing merchant ships and the 8 1 or 10 1 of war galleys Merchant galleys in the ancient Mediterranean were intended as carriers of valuable cargo or perishable goods that needed to be moved as safely and quickly as possible 21 Dionysus riding on a small galley like craft in a painting from the Dionysus cup by Exekias from c 530 BC 22 The first Greek galleys appeared around the second half of the 2nd millennium BC In the epic poem the Iliad set in the 12th century BC galleys with a single row of oarsmen were used primarily to transport soldiers to and from various land battles 23 The first recorded naval battle the Battle of the Delta between Egyptian forces under Ramesses III and the enigmatic alliance known as the Sea Peoples occurred as early as 1175 BC It is the first known engagement between organized armed forces using sea vessels as weapons of war though primarily as fighting platforms It was distinguished by being fought against an anchored fleet close to shore with land based archer support 24 The first true Mediterranean galleys usually had between 15 and 25 pairs of oars and were called triaconters or penteconters literally thirty and fifty oared respectively Not long after they appeared a third row of oars was added by the addition to a bireme of an outrigger a projecting construction that gave more room for the projecting oars These new galleys were called trieres three fitted in Greek The Romans later called this design the triremis trireme the name it is today best known under It has been hypothesized that early types of triremes existed as early as 700 BC but the earliest conclusive literary reference dates to 542 BC 25 With the development of triremes penteconters disappeared altogether Triaconters were still used but only for scouting and express dispatches 26 The first warships Edit A reconstruction of an ancient Greek galley squadron based on images of modern replica Olympias The earliest use for galleys in warfare was to ferry fighters from one place to another and until the middle of the 2nd millennium BC had no real distinction from merchant freighters Around the 14th century BC the first dedicated fighting ships were developed sleeker and with cleaner lines than the bulkier merchants They were used for raiding capturing merchants and for dispatches 27 During this early period raiding became the most important form of organized violence in the Mediterranean region Maritime classicist historian Lionel Casson used the example of Homer s works to show that seaborne raiding was considered a common and legitimate occupation among ancient maritime peoples The later Athenian historian Thucydides described it as having been without stigma before his time 28 The development of the ram sometime before the 8th century BC changed the nature of naval warfare which had until then been a matter of boarding and hand to hand fighting With a heavy projection at the foot of the bow sheathed with metal usually bronze a ship could incapacitate an enemy ship by punching a hole in its planking The relative speed and nimbleness of ships became important since a slower ship could be outmaneuvered and disabled by a faster one The earliest designs had only one row of rowers that sat in undecked hulls rowing against tholes or oarports that were placed directly along the railings The practical upper limit for wooden constructions fast and maneuverable enough for warfare was around 25 30 oars per side By adding another level of oars a development that occurred no later than c 750 BC the galley could be made shorter with as many rowers while making them strong enough to be effective ramming weapons 29 The emergence of more advanced states and intensified competition between them spurred on the development of advanced galleys with multiple banks of rowers During the middle of the first millennium BC the Mediterranean powers developed successively larger and more complex vessels the most advanced being the classical trireme with up to 170 rowers Triremes fought several important engagements in the naval battles of the Greco Persian Wars 502 449 BC and the Peloponnesian War 431 404 BC including the Battle of Aegospotami in 405 BC which sealed the defeat of Athens by Sparta and its allies The trireme was an advanced ship that was expensive to build and to maintain due its large crew By the 5th century advanced war galleys had been developed that required sizable states with an advanced economy to build and maintain It was associated with the latest in warship technology around the 4th century BC and could only be employed by an advanced state with an advanced economy and administration They required considerable skill to row and oarsmen were mostly free citizens who had years of experience at the oar 30 Hellenistic era and rise of the Republic Edit Main article Hellenistic era warships A Roman naval bireme in a relief from the Temple of Fortuna Primigenia in Praeneste Palastrina 31 built c 120 BC 32 in the Museo Pio Clementino Odysseus and the Sirens Ulixes mosaic at the Bardo National Museum in Tunis Tunisia 2nd century AD As civilizations around the Mediterranean grew in size and complexity both their navies and the galleys that made up their numbers became successively larger The basic design of two or three rows of oars remained the same but more rowers were added to each oar The exact reasons are not known but are believed to have been caused by addition of more troops and the use of more advanced ranged weapons on ships such as catapults The size of the new naval forces also made it difficult to find enough skilled rowers for the one man per oar system of the earliest triremes With more than one man per oar a single rower could set the pace for the others to follow meaning that more unskilled rowers could be employed 33 The successor states of Alexander the Great s empire built galleys that were like triremes or biremes in oar layout but manned with additional rowers for each oar The ruler Dionysius I of Syracuse c 432 367 BC is credited with pioneering the five and six meaning five or six rows of rowers plying two or three rows of oars Ptolemy II 283 46 BC is known to have built a large fleet of very large galleys with several experimental designs rowed by everything from 12 up to 40 rows of rowers though most of these are considered to have been quite impractical Fleets with large galleys were put in action in conflicts such as the Punic Wars 246 146 BC between the Roman Republic and Carthage which included massive naval battles with hundreds of vessels and tens of thousands of soldiers seamen and rowers 34 Most of the surviving documentary evidence comes from Greek and Roman shipping though it is likely that merchant galleys all over the Mediterranean were highly similar In Greek they were referred to as histiokopos sail oar er to reflect that they relied on both types of propulsion In Latin they were called actuaria navis ship that moves stressing that they were capable of making progress regardless of weather conditions As an example of the speed and reliability during an instance of the famous Carthago delenda est speech Cato the Elder demonstrated the close proximity of the Roman arch enemy Carthage by displaying a fresh fig to his audience that he claimed had been picked in North Africa only three days past Other cargoes carried by galleys were honey cheese meat and live animals intended for gladiator combat The Romans had several types of merchant galleys that specialized in various tasks out of which the actuaria with up to 50 rowers was the most versatile including the phaselus lit bean pod for passenger transport and the lembus a small scale express carrier Many of these designs continued to be used until the Middle Ages 35 Roman Imperial era Edit Two compact liburnians used by the Romans in the campaigns against the Dacians in the early 2nd century AD relief from Trajan s Column c 113 AD The Battle of Actium in 31 BC between the forces of Augustus and Mark Antony marked the peak of the Roman fleet arm After Augustus victory at Actium most of the Roman fleet was dismantled and burned The Roman civil wars were fought mostly by land forces and from the 160s until the 4th century AD no major fleet actions were recorded During this time most of the galley crews were disbanded or employed for entertainment purposes in mock battles or in handling the sail like sun screens in the larger Roman arenas What fleets remained were treated as auxiliaries of the land forces and galley crewmen themselves called themselves milites soldiers rather than nautae sailors 36 The Roman galley fleets were turned into provincial patrol forces that were smaller and relied largely on liburnians compact biremes with 25 pairs of oars These were named after an Illyrian tribe known by Romans for their sea roving practices and these smaller craft were based on or inspired by their vessels of choice The liburnians and other small galleys patrolled the rivers of continental Europe and reached as far as the Baltic where they were used to fight local uprisings and assist in checking foreign invasions The Romans maintained numerous bases around the empire along the rivers of Central Europe chains of forts along the northern European coasts and the British Isles Mesopotamia and North Africa including Trabzon Vienna Belgrade Dover Seleucia and Alexandria Few actual galley battles in the provinces are found in records One action in 70 AD at the unspecified location of the Island of the Batavians during the Batavian Rebellion was recorded and included a trireme as the Roman flagship 37 The last provincial fleet the classis Britannica was reduced by the late 200s though there was a minor upswing under the rule of Constantine 272 337 His rule also saw the last major naval battle of the unified Roman Empire before the permanent split into Western and Eastern later Byzantine Empires the Battle of Hellespont of 324 Some time after Hellespont the classical trireme fell out of use and its design was forgotten 38 Middle Ages Edit A transition from galley to sailing vessels as the most common types of warships began in the High Middle Ages c 11th century Large high sided sailing ships had always been formidable obstacles for galleys To low freeboard oared vessels the bulkier sailing ships the cog and the carrack were almost like floating fortresses being difficult to board and even harder to capture Galleys remained useful as warships throughout the entire Middle Ages because of their maneuverability Sailing ships of the time had only one mast usually with just a single large square sail This made them cumbersome to steer and it was virtually impossible to sail into the wind direction Galleys therefore were still the only ship type capable of coastal raiding and amphibious landings both key elements of medieval warfare 39 Eastern Mediterranean Edit In the eastern Mediterranean the Byzantine Empire struggled with the incursion from invading Muslim Arabs from the 7th century leading to fierce competition a buildup of fleet and war galleys of increasing size Soon after conquering Egypt and the Levant the Arab rulers built ships highly similar to Byzantine dromons with the help of local Coptic shipwrights from former Byzantine naval bases 40 By the 9th century the struggle between the Byzantines and Arabs had turned the Eastern Mediterranean into a no man s land for merchant activity In the 820s Crete was captured by Andalusian Muslims displaced by a failed revolt against the Emirate of Cordoba turning the island into a base for galley attacks on Christian shipping until the island was recaptured by the Byzantines in 960 41 Western Mediterranean Edit In the western Mediterranean and Atlantic the division of the Carolingian Empire in the late 9th century brought on a period of instability meaning increased piracy and raiding in the Mediterranean particularly by newly arrived Muslim invaders The situation was worsened by raiding Scandinavian Vikings who used longships vessels that in many ways were very close to galleys in design and functionality and also employed similar tactics To counter the threat local rulers began to build large oared vessels some with up to 30 pairs of oars that were larger faster and with higher sides than Viking ships 42 Scandinavian expansion including incursions into the Mediterranean and attacks on both Muslim Iberia and even Constantinople itself subsided by the mid 11th century By this time greater stability in merchant traffic was achieved by the emergence of Christian kingdoms such as those of France Hungary and Poland Around the same time Italian port towns and city states like Venice Pisa and Amalfi rose on the fringes of the Byzantine Empire as it struggled with eastern threats 43 After the advent of Islam and Muslim conquests of the 7th and 8th century the old Mediterranean economy collapsed and the volume of trade went down drastically 44 The Eastern Roman Byzantine Empire neglected to revive overland trade routes but was dependent on keeping the sea lanes open to keep the empire together Bulk trade fell around 600 750 while the luxury trade increased Galleys remained in service but were profitable mainly in the luxury trade which set off their high maintenance cost 45 In the 10th century there was a sharp increase in piracy which resulted in larger ships with more numerous crews These were mostly built by the growing city states of Italy which were emerging as the dominant sea powers including Venice Genoa and Pisa Inheriting the Byzantine ship designs the new merchant galleys were similar dromons but without any heavy weapons and both faster and wider They could be manned by crews of up to 1 000 men and were employed in both trade and warfare A further boost to the development of the large merchant galleys was the upswing in Western European pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land 46 Venetian great galley with three sails taking pilgrims to Jerusalem Conrad Grunenberg 1486 7 In Northern Europe Viking longships and their derivations knarrs dominated trading and shipping though developed separately from the Mediterranean galley tradition In the South galleys continued to be useful for trade even as sailing vessels evolved more efficient hulls and rigging since they could hug the shoreline and make steady progress when winds failed they were highly reliable The zenith in the design of merchant galleys came with the state owned great galleys of the Venetian Republic first built in the 1290s These were used to carry the lucrative trade in luxuries from the east such as spices silks and gems They were in all respects larger than contemporary war galleys up to 46 m and had a deeper draft with more room for cargo 140 250 t With a full complement of rowers ranging from 150 to 180 men all available to defend the ship from attack they were also very safe modes of travel This attracted a business of carrying affluent pilgrims to the Holy Land a trip that could be accomplished in as little 29 days on the route Venice Jaffa despite landfalls for rest and watering or for respite from rough weather 47 Development of the true galley Edit Late medieval maritime warfare was divided in two distinct regions In the Mediterranean galleys were used for raiding along coasts and in the constant fighting for naval bases In the Atlantic and Baltic there was greater focus on sailing ships that were used mostly for troop transport with galleys providing fighting support 48 Galleys were still widely used in the north and were the most numerous warships used by Mediterranean powers with interests in the north especially the French and Iberian kingdoms 49 During the 13th and 14th century the galley evolved into the design that was to remain essentially the same until it was phased out in the early 19th century The new type descended from the ships used by Byzantine and Muslim fleets in the Early Middle Ages These were the mainstay of all Christian powers until the 14th century including the great maritime republics of Genoa and Venice the Papacy the Hospitallers Aragon and Castile as well as by various pirates and corsairs The overall term used for these types of vessels was gallee sottili slender galleys The later Ottoman navy used similar designs but they were generally faster under sail and smaller but slower under oars 50 Galley designs were intended solely for close action with hand held weapons and projectile weapons like bows and crossbows In the 13th century the Iberian Crown of Aragon built several fleet of galleys with high castles manned with Catalan crossbowmen and regularly defeated numerically superior Angevin forces 51 From the first half of the 14th century the Venetian galere da mercato merchantman galleys were being built in the shipyards of the state run Arsenal as a combination of state enterprise and private association the latter being a kind of consortium of export merchants as Fernand Braudel described them 52 The ships sailed in convoy defended by archers and slingsmen ballestieri aboard and later carrying cannons In Genoa the other major maritime power of the time galleys and ships in general were more produced by smaller private ventures A 3D model of the basic hull structure of a Venetian galley of Flanders a large trading vessel of the 15th century The reconstruction by archaeologist Courtney Higgins is based on measurements given in contemporary ship treatises 53 Illustration of a 15th century trade galley from a manuscript by Michael of Rhodes 1401 1445 written in 1434 In the 14th and 15th centuries merchant galleys traded high value goods and carried passengers Major routes in the time of the early Crusades carried the pilgrim traffic to the Holy Land Later routes linked ports around the Mediterranean between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea a grain trade soon squeezed off by the Turkish capture of Constantinople 1453 and between the Mediterranean and Bruges where the first Genoese galley arrived at Sluys in 1277 the first Venetian galere in 1314 and Southampton Although primarily sailing vessels they used oars to enter and leave many trading ports of call the most effective way of entering and leaving the Lagoon of Venice The Venetian galera beginning at 100 tons and built as large as 300 was not the largest merchantman of its day when the Genoese carrack of the 15th century might exceed 1000 tons 54 In 1447 for instance Florentine galleys planned to call at 14 ports on their way to and from Alexandria 55 The availability of oars enabled these ships to navigate close to the shore where they could exploit land and sea breezes and coastal currents to work reliable and comparatively fast passages against the prevailing wind The large crews also provided protection against piracy These ships were very seaworthy a Florentine great galley left Southampton on 23 February 1430 and returned to its port at Pisa in 32 days They were so safe that merchandise was often not insured 56 These ships increased in size during this period and were the template from which the galleass developed Transition to sailing ships Edit During the early 15th century sailing ships began to dominate naval warfare in northern waters While the galley still remained the primary warship in southern waters a similar transition had begun also among the Mediterranean powers A Castilian naval raid on the island of Jersey in 1405 became the first recorded battle where a Mediterranean power employed a naval force consisting mostly of cogs or nefs rather than the oared powered galleys The Battle of Gibraltar between Castile and Portugal in 1476 was another important sign of change it was the first recorded battle where the primary combatants were full rigged ships armed with wrought iron guns on the upper decks and in the waists foretelling of the slow decline of the war galley 57 The sailing vessel was always at the mercy of the wind for propulsion and those that did carry oars were placed at a disadvantage because they were not optimized for oar use The galley did have disadvantages compared to the sailing vessel though Their smaller hulls were not able to hold as much cargo and this limited their range as the crews were required to replenish food stuffs more frequently 58 The low freeboard of the galley meant that in close action with a sailing vessel the sailing vessel would usually maintain a height advantage The sailing vessel could also fight more effectively farther out at sea and in rougher wind conditions because of the height of their freeboard 59 Under sail an oared warship was placed at much greater risk as a result of the piercings for the oars which were required to be near the waterline and would allow water to ingress into the galley if the vessel heeled too far to one side These advantages and disadvantages led the galley to be and remain a primarily coastal vessel The shift to sailing vessels in the Mediterranean was the result of the negation of some of the galley s advantages as well as the adoption of gunpowder weapons on a much larger institutional scale The sailing vessel was propelled in a different manner than the galley but the tactics were often the same until the 16th century The real estate afforded to the sailing vessel to place larger cannons and other armament mattered little because early gunpowder weapons had limited range and were expensive to produce The eventual creation of cast iron cannons allowed vessels and armies to be outfitted much more cheaply The cost of gunpowder also fell in this period 60 The armament of both vessel types varied between larger weapons such as bombards and the smaller swivel guns For logistical purposes it became convenient for those with larger shore establishments to standardize upon a given size of cannon Traditionally the English in the North and the Venetians in the Mediterranean are seen as some the earliest to move in this direction The improving sail rigs of northern vessels also allowed them to navigate in the coastal waters of the Mediterranean to a much larger degree than before 61 Aside from warships the decrease in the cost of gunpowder weapons also led to the arming of merchants The larger vessels of the north continued to mature while the galley retained its defining characteristics Attempts were made to stave this off such as the addition of fighting castles in the bow but such additions to counter the threats brought by larger sailing vessels often offset the advantages of galley 62 Introduction of guns Edit Painting of the Battle of Haarlemmermeer of 1573 by Hendrick Cornelisz Vroom Note the use of small sailing vessels and galleys on both sides From around 1450 three major naval powers established a dominance over different parts of the Mediterranean using galleys as their primary weapons at sea the Ottomans in the east Venice in the center and Habsburg Spain in the west 63 The core of their fleets were concentrated in the three major wholly dependable naval bases in the Mediterranean Constantinople Venice and Barcelona 64 Naval warfare in the 16th century Mediterranean was fought mostly on a smaller scale with raiding and minor actions dominating Only three truly major fleet engagements were actually fought in the 16th century the battles of Preveza in 1538 Djerba in 1560 and Lepanto in 1571 Lepanto became the last large all galley battle ever and was also one of the largest battle in terms of participants anywhere in early modern Europe before the Napoleonic Wars 65 66 The Mediterranean powers also employed galley forces for conflicts outside the Mediterranean Spain sent galley squadrons to the Netherlands during the later stages of the Eighty Years War which successfully operated against Dutch forces in the enclosed shallow coastal waters From the late 1560s galleys were also used to transport silver to Genoese bankers to finance Spanish troops against the Dutch uprising 67 Galleasses and galleys were part of an invasion force of over 16 000 men that conquered the Azores in 1583 Around 2 000 galley rowers were on board ships of the famous 1588 Spanish Armada though few of these actually made it to the battle itself 68 Outside European and Middle Eastern waters Spain built galleys to deal with pirates and privateers in both the Caribbean and the Philippines 69 Ottoman galleys contested the Portuguese intrusion in the Indian Ocean in the 16th century but failed against the high sided massive Portuguese carracks in open waters 70 Even though the carracks themselves were soon surpassed by other types of sailing vessels their greater range great size and high superstructures armed with numerous wrought iron guns easily outmatched the short ranged low freeboard Turkish galleys 70 The Spanish used galleys to more success in their colonial possessions in the Caribbean and the Philippines to hunt pirates 71 and sporadically used them in the Netherlands and the Bay of Biscay 72 Spain maintained four permanent galley squadrons to guard its coasts and trade routes against the Ottomans the French and their corsairs Together they formed the largest galley navy in the Mediterranean in the early 17th century They were the backbone of the Spanish Mediterranean war fleet and were used for ferrying troops supplies horses and munitions to Spain s Italian and African possessions 73 In Southeast Asia during the 16th and early 17th century the Aceh Sultanate had fleets of up to 100 native galleys ghali as well as smaller rowed vessels such as lancarans galliots and fustas 74 Some of the larger vessels were very large with heavier armament than standard Mediterranean galleys with raised platforms for infantry and some with stern structures similar in height to that of contemporary galleons 75 Ottoman galleys in battle with raiding boats in the Black Sea Sloane 3584 manuscript c 1636 Galleys had been synonymous with warships in the Mediterranean for at least 2 000 years and continued to fulfill that role with the invention of gunpowder and heavy artillery Though early 20th century historians often dismissed the galleys as hopelessly outclassed with the first introduction of naval artillery on sailing ships 76 it was the galley that was favored by the introduction of heavy naval guns Galleys were a more mature technology with long established tactics and traditions of supporting social institutions and naval organizations In combination with the intensified conflicts this led to a substantial increase in the size of galley fleets from c 1520 80 above all in the Mediterranean but also in other European theatres 77 Galleys and similar oared vessels remained uncontested as the most effective gun armed warships in theory until the 1560s and in practice for a few decades more and were actually considered a grave risk to sailing warships 78 They could effectively fight other galleys attack sailing ships in calm weather or in unfavorable winds or deny them action if needed and act as floating siege batteries They were also unequaled in their amphibious capabilities even at extended ranges as exemplified by French interventions as far north as Scotland in the mid 16th century 79 Heavy artillery on galleys was mounted in the bow which aligned easily with the long standing tactical tradition of attacking head on bow first The ordnance on galleys was heavy from its introduction in the 1480s and capable of quickly demolishing the high thin medieval stone walls that still prevailed in the 16th century This temporarily upended the strength of older seaside fortresses which had to be rebuilt to cope with gunpowder weapons The addition of guns also improved the amphibious abilities of galleys as they could make assaults supported with heavy firepower and were even more effectively defended when beached stern first 80 An accumulation and generalizing of bronze cannons and small firearms in the Mediterranean during the 16th century increased the cost of warfare but also made those dependent on them more resilient to manpower losses Older ranged weapons like bows or even crossbows required considerable skill to handle sometimes a lifetime of practice while gunpowder weapons required considerably less training to use successfully 81 According to a highly influential study by military historian John F Guilmartin this transition in warfare along with the introduction of much cheaper cast iron guns in the 1580s proved the death knell for the war galley as a significant military vessel 82 Gunpowder weapons began to displace men as the fighting power of armed forces making individual soldiers more deadly and effective As offensive weapons firearms could be stored for years with minimal maintenance and did not require the expenses associated with soldiers Manpower could thus be exchanged for capital investments something which benefited sailing vessels that were already far more economical in their use of manpower It also served to increase their strategic range and to out compete galleys as fighting ships 83 Mediterranean decline Edit The Battle of Lepanto in 1571 naval engagement between allied Christian forces and the Ottoman Turks Atlantic style warfare based on large heavily armed sailing ships began to change naval warfare in the Mediterranean in the early 17th century In 1616 a small Spanish squadron of five galleons and a patache was used to cruise the eastern Mediterranean and defeated a fleet of 55 galleys at the Battle of Cape Celidonia By 1650 war galleys were used primarily in the wars between Venice and the Ottoman Empire in their struggle for strategic island and coastal trading bases and until the 1720s by both France and Spain but for largely amphibious and cruising operations or in combination with heavy sailing ships in a major battle where they played specialized roles An example of this was when a Spanish fleet used its galleys in a mixed naval amphibious battle in the second 1641 battle of Tarragona to break a French naval blockade and land troops and supplies 84 Even the Venetians Ottomans and other Mediterranean powers began to build Atlantic style warships for use in the Mediterranean in the latter part of the century Christian and Muslim corsairs had been using galleys in sea roving and in support of the major powers in times of war but largely replaced them with xebecs various sail oar hybrids and a few remaining light galleys in the early 17th century 85 No large all galley battles were fought after the gigantic clash at Lepanto in 1571 and galleys were mostly used as cruisers or for supporting sailing warships as a rearguard in fleet actions similar to the duties performed by frigates outside the Mediterranean 85 They could assist damaged ships out of the line but generally only in very calm weather as was the case at the Battle of Malaga in 1704 86 They could also defeat larger ships that were isolated as when in 1651 a squadron of Spanish galleys captured a French galleon at Formentera For small states and principalities as well as groups of private merchants galleys were more affordable than large and complex sailing warships and were used as defense against piracy Galleys required less timber to build the design was relatively simple and they carried fewer guns They were tactically flexible and could be used for naval ambushes as well amphibious operations They also required few skilled seamen and were difficult for sailing ships to catch but vital in hunting down and catching other galleys and oared raiders 87 Mediterranean fleet strengths number of completed galleys 88 State 1650 1660 1670 1680 1690 1700 1715 1720Republic of Venice 70 60 60 60 50 50 50 40Ottoman Empire 70 100 80 100 60 50 30 30 30 30France 36 15 25 29 37 36 26 15Spain including Italian holdings 30 40 30 40 30 30 30 30 7 7Papal states 5 5 5 5 5 4 6 6Malta 6 7 7 7 8 8 5 5Genoa 10 10 10 10 10 6 6 6Tuscany 5 3 4 4 4 3 3 2 3Savoy 2 2 2 2 2 2 5 5Austria 4 4Total approximate 220 270 200 240 200 200 175 170 140 120 French ship under attack by Barbary pirates c 1615Among the largest galley fleets in the 17th century were operated by the two major Mediterranean powers France and Spain France had by the 1650s become the most powerful state in Europe and expanded its galley forces under the rule of the absolutist Sun King Louis XIV In the 1690s the French galley corps corps des galeres reached its all time peak with more than 50 vessels manned by over 15 000 men and officers becoming the largest galley fleet in the world at the time 89 Though there was intense rivalry between France and Spain not a single galley battle occurred between the two great powers during this period and virtually no naval battles between other nations either 90 During the War of the Spanish Succession French galleys were involved in actions against Antwerp and Harwich 91 but due to the intricacies of alliance politics there were never any Franco Spanish galley clashes In the first half of the 18th century the other major naval powers in the Mediterranean Sea the Order of Saint John based in Malta and of the Papal States in central Italy cut down drastically on their galley forces 92 Despite the lack of action the galley corps received vast resources 25 50 of the French naval expenditures during the 1660s 93 It was maintained as a functional fighting force right up until its abolition in 1748 though its primary function was more of a symbol of Louis XIV s absolutist ambitions 94 The last recorded battle in the Mediterranean where galleys played a significant part was at Matapan in 1717 between the Ottomans and Venice and its allies though they had little influence on the outcome Few large scale naval battles were fought in the Mediterranean throughout most of the remainder of the 18th century The Tuscan galley fleet was dismantled around 1718 Naples had only four old vessels by 1734 and the French Galley Corps had ceased to exist as an independent arm in 1748 Venice the Papal States and the Knights of Malta were the only state fleets that maintained galleys though in nothing like their previous quantities 95 By 1790 there were fewer than 50 galleys in service among all the Mediterranean powers half of which belonged to Venice 96 Use in northern Europe Edit Dutch ships ramming Spanish galleys in the Battle of the Narrow Seas October 1602 Oared vessels remained in use in northern waters for a long time though in subordinate role and in particular circumstances In the Italian Wars French galleys brought up from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic posed a serious threat to the early English Tudor navy during coastal operations The response came in the building of a considerable fleet of oared vessels including hybrids with a complete three masted rig as well as a Mediterranean style galleys that were even attempted to be manned with convicts and slaves 97 Under King Henry VIII the English navy used several kinds of vessels that were adapted to local needs English galliasses very different from the Mediterranean vessel of the same name were employed to cover the flanks of larger naval forces while pinnaces and rowbarges were used for scouting or even as a backup for the longboats and tenders for the larger sailing ships 98 During the Dutch Revolt 1566 1609 both the Dutch and Spanish found galleys useful for amphibious operations in the many shallow waters around the Low Countries where deep draft sailing vessels could not enter 91 While galleys were too vulnerable to be used in large numbers in the open waters of the Atlantic they were well suited for use in much of the Baltic Sea by Denmark Norway Sweden Russia and some of the Central European powers with ports on the southern coast There were two types of naval battlegrounds in the Baltic One was the open sea suitable for large sailing fleets the other was the coastal areas and especially the chain of small islands and archipelagos that ran almost uninterrupted from Stockholm to the Gulf of Finland In these areas conditions were often too calm cramped and shallow for sailing ships but they were excellent for galleys and other oared vessels 99 Galleys of the Mediterranean type were first introduced in the Baltic Sea around the mid 16th century as competition between the Scandinavian states of Denmark and Sweden intensified The Swedish galley fleet was the largest outside the Mediterranean and served as an auxiliary branch of the army Very little is known about the design of Baltic Sea galleys except that they were overall smaller than in the Mediterranean and they were rowed by army soldiers rather than convicts or slaves 100 Baltic revival and decline Edit A painting of the Battle of Grengam in 1720 by Ferdinand Perrot 1808 41 showing a large Russian galley engaging Swedish frigates at close range Note the crowded fighting platform rambade in the bow Galleys were introduced to the Baltic Sea in the 16th century but the details of their designs are lacking due to the absence of records They might have been built in a more regional style but the only known depiction from the time shows a typical Mediterranean style vessel There is conclusive evidence that Denmark Norway became the first Baltic power to build classic Mediterranean style galleys in the 1660s though they proved to be generally too large to be useful in the shallow waters of the Baltic archipelagos Sweden and especially Russia began to launch galleys and various rowed vessels in great numbers during the Great Northern War in the first two decades of the 18th century 101 Sweden was late in the game when it came to building an effective oared fighting fleet skargardsflottan the archipelago fleet officially armens flotta the fleet of the army while the Russian galley forces under Tsar Peter I developed into a supporting arm for the sailing navy and a well functioning auxiliary of the army which infiltrated and conducted numerous raids on the eastern Swedish coast in the 1710s 102 Sweden and Russia became the two main competitors for Baltic dominance in the 18th century and built the largest galley fleets in the world at the time They were used for amphibious operations in Russo Swedish wars of 1741 43 and 1788 90 The last galleys ever constructed were built in 1796 by Russia and remained in service well into the 19th century but saw little action 103 The last time galleys were deployed in action was when the Russian navy was attacked in Abo Turku in 1854 as part of the Crimean War 104 In the second half of the 18th century the role of Baltic galleys in coastal fleets was replaced first with hybrid archipelago frigates such as the turuma or pojama and xebecs and after the 1790s with various types of gunboats 105 Both the Russian and Swedish navies were based on a form of conscription and both navies used conscripts as galley rowers This had several advantages over convicts or slaves the rowers could be armed to fight as marines they could be also used as land soldiers and invasion force and were more skilled than forced labor Since most naval conscripts came from coastal parishes and towns most were already experienced seafarers when they entered the service Baltic galley fleet strengths 106 1680 1700 1721 1740 1750 1770 1790 1810 1830Denmark Norway 13 7 8 0 0 13 9 0 0Sweden 0 0 24 38 80 51 39 26 4Russia 0 0 170 74 100 56 105 20 fewer than 20total 13 7 202 112 180 120 153 46 lt 24Construction Edit Illustration of an Egyptian rowed ship of c 1250 BC Due to a lack of a proper keel the vessel has a truss a thick cable along its length to prevent it from losing its shape Galleys have since their first appearance in ancient times been intended as highly maneuverable vessels independent of winds by being rowed and usually with a focus on speed under oars The profile has therefore been that of a markedly elongated hull with a ratio of breadth to length at the waterline of at least 1 5 and in the case of ancient Mediterranean galleys as much as 1 10 with a small draught the measurement of how much of a ship s structure that is submerged under water To make it possible to efficiently row the vessels the freeboard the height of the railing above the surface of the water was by necessity kept low This gave oarsmen enough leverage to row efficiently but at the expense of seaworthiness These design characteristics made the galley fast and maneuverable but more vulnerable to rough weather The documentary evidence for the construction of ancient galleys is fragmentary particularly in pre Roman times Plans and schematics in the modern sense did not exist until the 17th century and nothing like them has survived from ancient times How galleys were constructed has therefore been a matter of looking at circumstantial evidence in literature art coinage and monuments that include ships some of them actually in natural size Since the war galleys floated even with a ruptured hull and virtually never had any ballast or heavy cargo that could sink them not a single wreck of one has so far been found The only exception has been a partial wreck of a small Punic liburnian from the Roman era the Marsala Ship 107 On the funerary monument of the Egyptian king Sahure 2487 2475 BC in Abusir there are relief images of vessels with a marked sheer the upward curvature at each end of the hull and seven pairs of oars along its side a number that was likely to have been merely symbolical and steering oars in the stern They have one mast all lowered and vertical posts at stem and stern with the front decorated with an Eye of Horus the first example of such a decoration It was later used by other Mediterranean cultures to decorate seagoing craft in the belief that it helped to guide the ship safely to its destination These early galleys apparently lacked a keel meaning they lacked stiffness along their length Therefore they had large cables connecting stem and stern resting on massive crutches on deck They were held in tension to avoid hogging or bending the ship s construction upward in the middle while at sea 17 In the 15th century BC Egyptian galleys were still depicted with the distinctive extreme sheer but had by then developed the distinctive forward curving stern decorations with ornaments in the shape of lotus flowers 108 They had possibly developed a primitive type of keel but still retained the large cables intended to prevent hogging 18 A schematic view of the mortise and tenon technique for shipbuilding that dominated the Mediterranean until the 7th century AD 109 The design of the earliest oared vessels is mostly unknown and highly conjectural They likely used a mortise construction but were sewn together rather than pinned together with nails and dowels Being completely open they were rowed or even paddled from the open deck and likely had ram entries projections from the bow lowered the resistance of moving through water making them slightly more hydrodynamic The first true galleys the triaconters literally thirty oarers and penteconters fifty oarers were developed from these early designs and set the standard for the larger designs that would come later They were rowed on only one level which made them fairly slow likely only 5 5 5 knots By the 8th century BC the first galleys rowed at two levels had been developed among the earliest being the two level penteconters which were considerably shorter than the one level equivalents and therefore more maneuverable They were an estimated 25 m in length and displaced 15 tonnes with 25 pairs of oars These could have reached an estimated top speed of up to 7 5 knots making them the first genuine warships when fitted with bow rams They were equipped with a single square sail on mast set roughly halfway along the length of the hull 110 Trireme Edit Main article Trireme The stern of the modern trireme replica Olympias with twin side rudders By the 5th century BC the first triremes were in use by various powers in the eastern Mediterranean It had now become a fully developed highly specialized vessel of war that was capable of high speeds and complex maneuvers At nearly 40 m in length displacing almost 50 tonnes it was more than three times as expensive as a two level penteconter A trireme also had an additional mast with a smaller square sail placed near the bow 111 Up to 170 oarsmen sat on three levels with one oar each that varied slightly in length To accommodate three levels of oars rowers sat staggered on three levels Arrangements of the three levels are believed to have varied but the most well documented design made use of a projecting structure or outrigger where the oarlock in the form of a thole pin was placed This allowed the outermost row of oarsmen enough leverage for full strokes that made efficient use of their oars 112 The Athlit ram a preserved original warship ram from around 530 270 BC It weighs nearly half a tonne and was probably fitted to a five or a four 113 The first dedicated war galleys fitted with rams were built with a mortise and tenon technique a so called shell first method In this the planking of the hull was strong enough to hold the ship together structurally and was also watertight without the need for caulking Hulls had sharp bottoms without keelsons in order to support the structure and were reinforced by transverse framing secured with dowels with nails driven through them To prevent the hull from hogging there was a hypozoma ypozwma underbelt 114 a thick doubled rope that connected bow with stern It was kept taut to add strength to the construction along its length but its exact design or the method of tightening is not known 115 The ram the primary weapon of ancient galleys from around the 8th to the 4th century was not attached directly on the hull but to a structure extending from it This way the ram could twist off if got stuck after ramming rather than breaking the integrity of the hull The ram fitting consisted of a massive projecting timber and the ram itself was a thick bronze casting with horizontal blades that could weigh from 400 kg up to 2 tonnes 111 Roman era Edit Galleys from 4th century BC up to the time of the early Roman Empire in the 1st century AD became successively larger Three levels of oars was the practical upper limit but it was improved on by making ships longer broader and heavier and placing more than one rower per oar Naval conflict grew more intense and extensive and by 100 BC galleys with four five or six rows of oarsmen were commonplace and carried large complements of soldiers and catapults With high freeboard up to 3 m and additional tower structures from which missiles could be shot down onto enemy decks they were intended to be like floating fortresses 116 Designs with everything from eight rows of oarsmen and upward were built but most of them are believed to have been impractical show pieces never used in actual warfare 117 Ptolemy IV the Greek pharaoh of Egypt 221 205 BC is recorded as building a gigantic ship with forty rows of oarsmen though no specification of its design remains One suggested design was that of a huge trireme catamaran with up to 14 men per oar and it is assumed that it was intended as a showpiece rather than a practical warship 118 With the consolidation of Roman imperial power the size of both fleets and galleys decreased considerably The huge polyremes disappeared and the fleet were equipped primarily with triremes and liburnians compact biremes with 25 pairs of oars that were well suited for patrol duty and chasing down raiders and pirates 119 In the northern provinces oared patrol boats were employed to keep local tribes in check along the shores of rivers like the Rhine and the Danube 120 As the need for large warships disappeared the design of the trireme the pinnacle of ancient war ship design fell into obscurity and was eventually forgotten The last known reference to triremes in battle is dated to 324 at the Battle of the Hellespont In the late 5th century the Byzantine historian Zosimus declared the knowledge of how to build them to have been long since forgotten 121 Middle Ages Edit The earliest medieval galley specification comes from an order of Charles I of Sicily in 1275 AD 122 Overall length 39 30 m keel length 28 03 m depth 2 08 m Hull width 3 67 m Width between outriggers 4 45 m 108 oars most 6 81 m long some 7 86 m 2 steering oars 6 03 m long Foremast and middle mast respectively heights 16 08 m 11 00 m circumference both 0 79 m yard lengths 26 72 m 17 29 m Overall deadweight tonnage approximately 80 metric tons This type of vessel had two later three men on a bench each working his own oar This vessel had much longer oars than the Athenian trireme which were 4 41 m amp 4 66 m long 123 This type of warship was called galia sottil 124 The dromon and the galea Edit 14th century painting of a light galley from an icon now at the Byzantine and Christian Museum at Athens The primary warship of the Byzantine navy until the 12th century was the dromon and other similar ship types Considered an evolution of the Roman liburnian the term first appeared in the late 5th century and was commonly used for a specific kind of war galley by the 6th century 125 The term dromōn literally runner itself comes from the Greek root drom aō to run and 6th century authors like Procopius are explicit in their references to the speed of these vessels 126 During the next few centuries as the naval struggle with the Arabs intensified heavier versions with two or possibly even three banks of oars evolved 127 The accepted view is that the main developments which differentiated the early dromons from the liburnians and that henceforth characterized Mediterranean galleys were the adoption of a full deck the abandonment of rams on the bow in favor of an above water spur and the gradual introduction of lateen sails 128 The exact reasons for the abandonment of the ram are unclear Depictions of upward pointing beaks in the 4th century Vatican Vergil manuscript may well illustrate that the ram had already been replaced by a spur in late Roman galleys 129 One possibility is that the change occurred because of the gradual evolution of the ancient shell first construction method against which rams had been designed into the skeleton first method which produced a stronger and more flexible hull less susceptible to ram attacks 130 At least by the early 7th century the ram s original function had been forgotten 131 The dromons that Procopius described were single banked ships of probably 25 oars per side Unlike ancient vessels which used an outrigger these extended directly from the hull 132 In the later bireme dromons of the 9th and 10th centuries the two oar banks were divided by the deck with the first oar bank was situated below whilst the second oar bank was situated above deck these rowers were expected to fight alongside the marines in boarding operations 133 The overall length of these ships was probably about 32 meters 134 The stern prymne had a tent that covered the captain s berth 135 the prow featured an elevated forecastle that acted as a fighting platform and could house one or more siphons for the discharge of Greek fire 136 and on the largest dromons there were wooden castles on either side between the masts providing archers with elevated firing platforms 137 The bow spur was intended to ride over an enemy ship s oars breaking them and rendering it helpless against missile fire and boarding actions 138 Standardization Edit From the 12th century the design of war galleys evolved into the form that would remain largely the same until the building of the last war galleys in the late 18th century The length to breadth ratio was a minimum of 8 1 A rectangular telaro an outrigger was added to support the oars and the rowers benches were laid out in a diagonal herringbone pattern angled aft on either side of a central gangway or corsia 139 It was based on the form of the galea the smaller Byzantine galleys and would be known mostly by the Italian term galea sottile literally slender galley A second smaller mast was added sometime in the 13th century and the number of rowers rose from two to three rowers per bench as a standard from the late 13th to the early 14th century 140 The galee sottili would make up the bulk the main war fleets of every major naval power in the Mediterranean assisted by the smaller single masted galiotte as well as the Christian and Muslim corsairs fleets Ottoman galleys were very similar in design though in general smaller faster under sail but slower under oars 141 The standard size of the galley remained stable from the 14th until the early 16th century when the introduction of naval artillery began to have effects on design and tactics 142 A Venetian galea sottile from the late 15th century from Vittore Carpaccio s Return of the Ambassadors in the series Legend of Saint Ursula 1497 1498 Note the oars arranged in groups of three according to the alla sensile rowing method The traditional two side rudders were complemented with a stern rudder sometime after c 1400 and eventually the side rudders disappeared altogether 143 It was also during the 15th century that large artillery pieces were first mounted on galleys Burgundian records from the mid 15th century describe galleys with some form of guns but do not specify the size The first conclusive evidence of a large cannon mounted on a galley comes from a woodcut of a Venetian galley in 1486 144 The first guns were fixed directly on timbers in the bow and aimed directly forward a placement that would remain largely unchanged until the galley disappeared from active service in the 19th century 145 The ubiquitous bow fighting platform rambade of early modern galleys This model is of a 1715 Swedish galley somewhat smaller than the standard Mediterranean war galley but still based on the same design With the introduction of guns in the bows of galleys a permanent wooden structure called rambade French rambade Italian rambata Spanish arrumbada was introduced The rambade became standard on virtually all galleys in the early 16th century There were some variations in the navies of different Mediterranean powers but the overall layout was the same The forward aiming battery was covered by a wooden platform which gave gunners a minimum of protection and functioned as both a staging area for boarding attacks and as a firing platform for on board soldiers 146 After its introduction the rambade became a standard detail on every fighting galley until the very end of galley era in the early 19th century 147 In the mid 17th century galleys reached what has been described as their final form 148 Galleys had looked more or less the same for over four centuries and a fairly standardized classification system for different sizes of galleys had been developed by the Mediterranean bureaucracies based mostly on the number of benches in a vessel 11 A Mediterranean galley would have 25 26 pairs of oars with five men per oar c 250 rowers 50 100 sailors and 50 100 soldiers for a total of about 500 men The exceptions were the significantly larger flagships often called lanternas lantern galleys that had 30 pairs of oars and up to seven rowers per oar The armament consisted of one heavy 24 or 36 pounder gun in the bows flanked by two to four 4 to 12 pounders Rows of light swivel guns were often placed along the entire length of the galley on the railings for close quarter defense The length to width ratio of the ships was about 8 1 with two main masts carrying one large lateen sail each In the Baltic galleys were generally shorter with a length to width ratio from 5 1 to 7 1 an adaptation to the cramped conditions of the Baltic archipelagos 149 A single mainmast was standard on most war galleys until c 1600 A second shorter mast could be raised temporarily in the bows but became permanent by the early 17th century It was stepped slightly to the side to allow for the recoil of the heavy guns the other was placed roughly in the center of the ship A third smaller mast further astern akin to a mizzen mast was also introduced on large galleys possibly in the early 17th century but was standard at least by the early 18th century 150 Galleys had little room for provisions and depended on frequent resupplying and were often beached at night to rest the crew and cook meals Where cooking areas were actually present they consisted of a clay lined box with a hearth or similar cooking equipment fitted on the vessel in place of a rowing bench usually on the port left side 151 Model of the French Dauphine Side view Dauphine was built in 1736 and survived until the French Revolution Front view Contemporary model on display at Toulon naval museum Propulsion EditThroughout their long history galleys relied on rowing as the most important means of propulsion The arrangement of rowers during the 1st millennium BC developed gradually from a single row up to three rows arranged in a complex staggered seating arrangement Anything above three levels however proved to be physically impracticable Initially there was only one rower per oar but the number steadily increased with a number of different combinations of rowers per oar and rows of oars The ancient terms for galleys was based on the numbers of rows or rowers plying the oars not the number of rows of oars Today it is best known by a modernized Latin terminology based on numerals with the ending reme from remus oar A trireme was a ship with three rows of oarsmen a quadrireme four a hexareme six and so forth There were warships that ran up to ten or even eleven rows but anything above six was rare A huge forty rowed ship was built during the reign of Ptolemy IV in Egypt Little is known about its design but it is assumed to have been an impractical prestige vessel Rowing Edit Modern reconstruction of a cross section of an ancient Greek trireme showing the three levels of rowers Ancient rowing was done in a fixed seated position the most effective rowing position with rowers facing the stern A sliding stroke which provided the strength from both legs as well as the arms was suggested by earlier historians but no conclusive evidence has supported it Practical experiments with the full scale reconstruction Olympias has shown that there was insufficient space while moving or rolling seats would have been highly impractical to construct with ancient methods 152 Rowers in ancient war galleys sat below the upper deck with little view of their surroundings The rowing was therefore managed by supervisors and coordinated with pipes or rhythmic chanting 153 Galleys were highly maneuverable able to turn on their axis or even to row backward though it required a skilled and experienced crew 154 In galleys with an arrangement of three men per oar all would be seated but the rower furthest inboard would perform a stand and sit stroke getting up on his feet to push the oar forward and then sitting down again to pull it back 154 The faster a vessel travels the more energy it uses Reaching high speed requires energy which a human powered vessel is incapable of producing Oar systems generate very low amounts of energy for propulsion only about 70 W per rower and the upper limit for rowing in a fixed position is around 10 knots 155 Ancient war galleys of the kind used in Classical Greece are by modern historians considered to be the most energy efficient and fastest of galley designs throughout history A full scale replica of a 5th century BC trireme the Olympias was built 1985 87 and was put through a series of trials to test its performance It proved that a cruising speed of 7 8 knots could be maintained for an entire day Sprinting speeds of up to 10 knots were possible but only for a few minutes and would tire the crew quickly 156 Ancient galleys were built very light and the original triremes are assumed to never have been surpassed in speed 157 Medieval galleys are believed to have been considerably slower especially since they were not built with ramming tactics in mind A cruising speed of no more than 2 3 knots has been estimated A sprint speed of up to 7 knots was possible for 20 30 minutes but risked exhausting the rowers completely 158 Rowing in headwinds or even moderately rough weather was difficult as well as exhausting 159 In high seas ancient galleys would set sail to run before the wind They were highly susceptible to high waves and could become unmanageable if the rowing frame apostis came awash Ancient and medieval galleys are assumed to have sailed only with the wind more or less astern with a top speed of 8 9 knots in fair conditions 160 Galley slaves Edit Main article Galley slave Model of a Venetian three banked galley rowed alla sensile with three rowers sharing a bench but handling one oar each Contrary to the popular image of rowers chained to the oars conveyed by movies such as Ben Hur there is no evidence that ancient navies ever made use of condemned criminals or slaves as oarsmen with the possible exception of Ptolemaic Egypt 161 Literary evidence indicates that Greek and Roman navies relied on paid labor or ordinary soldiers to man their galleys 162 163 Slaves were put at the oars only in times of extreme crisis In some cases these people were given freedom thereafter while in others they began their service aboard as free men Roman merchant vessels usually sailing vessels were manned by slaves sometimes even with slaves as ship s master but this was seldom the case in merchant galleys 164 It was only in the early 16th century that the modern idea of the galley slave became commonplace Galley fleets as well as the size of individual vessels increased in size which required more rowers The number of benches could not be increased without lengthening hulls beyond their structural limits and more than three oars per bench was not practicable The demand for more rowers also meant that the relatively limited number of skilled oarsmen could not keep up with the demand of large galley fleets It became increasingly common to man galleys with convicts or slaves which required a simpler method of rowing The older method of employing professional rowers using the alla sensile method one oar per man with two to three sharing the same bench was gradually phased out in favor of rowing a scaloccio which required less skill 165 A single large oar was used for each bench with several rowers working it together and the number of oarsmen per oar rose from three up to five In some very large command galleys there could be as many as seven to an oar 166 An illustration from 1643 showing the layout of rowing benches as well and placement of rowers on a galley with 16 pairs of oars It also shows a rower at the top of the stroke using the standing rowing technique typical of a scaloccio rowing All major Mediterranean powers sentenced criminals to galley service but initially only in time of war Christian naval powers such as Spain frequently employed Muslim captives and prisoners of war The Ottoman navy and its North African corsair allies often put Christian prisoners to the oars but also mixed volunteers Spain relied on mostly servile rowers in great part because its organizational structure was geared toward employing slaves and convicts 167 Venice was one of few major naval powers that used almost only free rowers a result of their reliance on alla sensile rowing which required skilled professional rowers The Knights of Saint John used slaves extensively as did the Papal States Florence and Genoa North African ghazi corsairs relied almost entirely on Christian slaves for rowers 168 Sails Edit In ancient galleys under sail most of the moving power came from a single square sail It was rigged on a mast somewhat forward of the center of the ship with a smaller mast carrying a head sail in the bow Triangular lateen sails are attested as early as the 2nd century AD and gradually became the sail of choice for galleys By the 9th century lateens were firmly established as part of the standard galley rig The lateen rig was more complicated and required a larger crew to handle than a square sail rig but this was not a problem in the heavily manned galleys 169 Belisarius Byzantine invasion fleet of 533 was at least partly fitted with lateen sails making it probable that by the time the lateen had become the standard rig for the dromon 170 with the traditional square sail gradually falling from use in medieval navigation in the Mediterranean 171 Unlike a square sail rig the spar of a lateen sail did not pivot around the mast To change tacks the entire spar had to be lifted over the mast and to the other side Since the spar was often much longer than the mast itself and not much shorter than the ship itself it was a complex and time consuming maneuver 172 Armament and tactics EditMain article Galley tactics In the earliest times of naval warfare boarding was the only means of deciding a naval engagement but little to nothing is known about the tactics involved In the first recorded naval battle in history the Battle of the Delta the forces of Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses III won a decisive victory over a force made up of the enigmatic group known as the Sea Peoples As shown in commemorative reliefs of the battle Egyptian archers on ships and the nearby shores of the Nile rain down arrows on the enemy ships At the same time Egyptian galleys engage in boarding action and capsize the ships of the Sea Peoples with ropes attached to grappling hooks thrown into the rigging 173 Introduction of the ram Edit The ram bow of the trireme Olympias a modern full scale reconstruction of a classical Greek trireme Around the 8th century BC ramming began to be employed as war galleys were equipped with heavy bronze rams Records of the Persian Wars in the early 5th century BC by the Ancient historian Herodotus c 484 25 BC show that by this time ramming tactics had evolved among the Greeks The formations adapted for ramming warfare could either be in columns in line ahead one ship following the next or in a line abreast with the ships side by side depending on the tactical situation and the surrounding geography The primary methods for attack was either to break through the enemy formation or to outflank it 174 Ramming itself was done by smashing into the rear or side of an enemy ship punching a hole in the planking This did not actually sink an ancient galley unless it was heavily laden with cargo and stores With a normal load it was buoyant enough to float even with a breached hull Breaking the enemy s oars was another way of rendering ships immobile rendering them easier targets If ramming was not possible or successful the on board complement of soldiers would attempt to board and capture the enemy vessel by securing it with grappling irons accompanied by missile fire with arrows or javelins Trying to set the enemy ship on fire by hurling incendiary missiles or by pouring the content of fire pots attached to long handles is thought to have been used especially since smoke below decks would easily disable rowers 175 Rhodes was the first naval power to employ this weapon sometime in the 3rd century and used it to fight off head on attacks or to frighten enemies into exposing their sides for a ramming attack 176 A successful ramming was difficult to achieve just the right amount of speed and precise maneuvering were required Fleets that did not have well drilled experienced oarsmen and skilled commanders relied more on boarding with superior infantry such as increasing the complement to 40 soldiers Ramming attempts were countered by keeping the bow toward the enemy until the enemy crew tired and then attempting to board as quickly as possible A double line formation could be used to achieve a breakthrough by engaging the first line and then rushing the rearguard in to take advantage of weak spots in the enemy s defense This required superiority in numbers though since a shorter front risked being flanked or surrounded 177 Boarding prevails Edit The Byzantine fleet repels the Rus attack on Constantinople in 941 The Byzantine dromons are rolling over the Rus vessels and smashing their oars with their spurs Despite the attempts to counter increasingly heavy ships ramming tactics were gradually superseded in the last centuries BC by the Macedonians and Romans both primarily land based powers Hand to hand fighting with large complements of heavy infantry supported by ship borne catapults dominated the fighting style during the Roman era a move that was accompanied by the conversion to heavier ships with larger rowing complements and more men per oar Though effectively lowering mobility it meant that less skill was required from individual oarsmen Fleets thereby became less dependent on rowers with a lifetime of experience at the oar 33 By late antiquity in the 1st centuries AD ramming tactics had completely disappeared along with the knowledge of the design of the ancient trireme Medieval galleys instead developed a projection or spur in the bow that was designed to break oars and to act as a boarding platform for storming enemy ships The only remaining examples of ramming tactics were passing references to attempts to collide with ships in order to destabilize or capsize them 178 Byzantine ship attacking with Greek fire Madrid Skylitzes manuscript 11th century The Byzantine navy the largest Mediterranean war fleet throughout most of the Early Middle Ages employed crescent formations with the flagship in the center and the heavier ships at the horns of the formation in order to turn the enemy s flanks Similar tactics are believed to have been employed by the Arab fleets they frequently fought from the 7th century onward The Byzantines were the first to employ Greek fire a highly effective incendiary liquid as a naval weapon It could be fired through a metal tube or siphon mounted in the bows similar to a modern flame thrower Greek fire was similar to napalm and was a key to several major Byzantine victories By 835 the weapon had spread to the Arabs who equipped harraqas fireships with it The initial stages in naval battles was an exchanges of missiles ranging from combustible projectiles to arrows caltrops and javelins The aim was not to sink ships but to deplete the ranks of the enemy crews before the boarding commenced which decided the outcome Once the enemy strength was judged to have been reduced sufficiently the fleets closed in the ships grappled each other and the marines and upper bank oarsmen boarded the enemy vessel and engaged in hand to hand combat 178 Byzantine dromons had pavesades racks along the railings on which marines could hang their shields providing protection to the deck crew 179 Larger ships also had wooden castles on either side between the masts which allowed archers to shoot from an elevated firing position 137 Battle between Venetian and Holy Roman fleets detail of fresco by Spinello Aretino 1407 1408 Later medieval navies continued to use similar tactics with the line abreast formation as standard As galleys were intended to be fought from the bows and were at their weakest along the sides especially in the middle The crescent formation employed by the Byzantines continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages It would allow the wings of the fleet to crash their bows straight into the sides of the enemy ships at the edge of the formation 180 Roger of Lauria c 1245 1305 was a successful medieval naval tactician who fought for the Aragon navy against French Angevin fleets in the War of the Sicilian Vespers At the Battle of Malta in July 1283 he lured out Angevin galleys that were beached stern first by openly challenging them Attacking them in a strong defensive position head on would have been very dangerous since it offered good cohesion allowed rowers to escape ashore and made it possible to reinforce weak positions by transferring infantry along the shore He also employed skilled crossbowmen and almogavars light infantry that were more nimbler in ship to ship actions than heavily armed and armored French soldiers 181 At the Battle of the Gulf of Naples in 1284 his forces launched clay cooking pots filled with soap before attacking when the pots broke against the enemy decks they became perilously slippery and difficult for heavy infantry to keep their feet on 182 Gun galleys Edit The earliest guns were of large calibers and were initially of wrought iron which made them weak compared to cast bronze guns that would become standard in the 16th century They were at first fixed directly on timbers in the bow aiming directly forward This placement would remain largely unchanged until the galley disappeared from active service in the 19th century 145 The introduction of heavy guns and small arms did not change tactics considerably If anything it accentuated the bow as the offensive weapon being both a staging area for boarders and the given position for small arms and cannons The galley was capable of outperforming sailing vessel in early battles It retained a distinct tactical advantage even after the initial introduction of naval artillery because of the ease with which it could be brought to bear upon an opposing vessel 183 Contemporary depiction of the Battle of Lepanto in 1571 that shows the strict formations of the opposing fleets Fresco in the Gallery of Maps in Vatican Museum In large scale galley to galley engagements tactics remained essentially the same until the end of the 16th century Cannons and small firearms were introduced around the 14th century but did not have immediate effects on tactics the same basic crescent formation in line abreast that was employed at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571 was used by the Byzantine fleet almost a millennium earlier 184 Artillery on early gun galleys was not used as a long range standoff weapon against other gun armed ships The maximum distance at which contemporary cannons were effective c 500 m 1600 ft could be covered by a galley in about two minutes much faster than the reload time of any heavy artillery Gun crews would therefore hold their fire until the last possible moment somewhat similar to infantry tactics in the pre industrial era of short range firearms 185 The weak points of a galley remained the sides and especially the rear the command center Unless one side managed to outmaneuver the other battle would be met with ships crashing into each other head on Once fighting began with ships locking on to one another bow to bow the fighting would be fought over the front line ships Unless a galley was completely overrun by an enemy boarding party fresh troops could be fed into the fight from reserve vessels in the rear 186 Ceremonial symbolism Edit The Galley Subtle one of the very few Mediterranean style galleys employed by the English This illustration is from the Anthony Roll c 1546 and was intended as its centerpiece Galleys were used for purely ceremonial purposes by many rulers and states In early modern Europe galleys enjoyed a level of prestige that sailing vessels did not enjoy Galleys had from an early stage been commanded by the leaders of land forces and fought with tactics adapted from land warfare As such they enjoyed the prestige associated with land battles the ultimate achievement of a high standing noble or king In the Baltic the Swedish king Gustav I the founder of the modern Swedish state showed particular interest in galleys as was befitting a Renaissance prince Whenever traveling by sea Gustav the court royal bureaucrats and the royal bodyguard would travel by galley 187 Around the same time English king Henry VIII had high ambitions to live up to the reputation of the omnipotent Renaissance ruler and also had a few Mediterranean style galleys built and even manned them with slaves though the English navy relied mostly on sailing ships at the time 98 Despite the rising importance of sailing warships galleys were more closely associated with land warfare and the prestige associated with it British naval historian Nicholas Rodger has described this as display of the supreme symbol of royal power derived from its intimate association with armies and consequently with princes 188 This was put to perhaps its greatest effect by the French Sun King Louis XIV in the form of a dedicated galley corps Louis and the French state created a tool and symbol of royal authority that did little fighting but was a potent extension of absolutist ambitions Galleys were built to scale for the royal flotilla at the Grand Canal at the Gardens of Versailles for the amusement of the court 189 The royal galleys patrolled the Mediterranean forcing ships of other states to salute the King s banner convoyed ambassadors and cardinals and obediently participating in naval parades and royal pageantry Historian Paul Bamford described the galleys as vessels that must have appealed to military men and to aristocratic officers accustomed to being obeyed and served 190 Gouache of a late 17th century French royal galley The vessel is richly decorated with red and blue damask brocade and velvet for the stern canopy and flags and carved gilded ornaments on railings outrigger and hull Sentencing criminals political dissenters and religious deviants as galley rowers also turned the galley corps into a large feared and cost effective prison system 191 French Protestants were particularly ill treated at the oar and though they were only a small minority their experiences came to dominate the legacy of the king s galleys In 1909 French author Albert Savine 1859 1927 wrote that a fter the Bastille the galleys were the greatest horror of the old regime 192 Long after convicts stopped serving in the galleys and even after the reign of Napoleon the term galerien galley rower remained a symbolic general term for forced labor and convicts serving harsh sentences 193 Being a galley rower did not carry such stigma at Baltic where galley rowers were conscripts rather they considered themselves as marine soldiers The main building of the Finnish Naval Academy at Suomenlinna Helsinki bears the nickname Kivikaleeri Stone Galley as a legacy of the era Surviving examples Edit The Ottoman galley Tarihi Kadirga at the Istanbul Naval Museum in 2014 The Istanbul Naval Museum contains the galley Tarihi Kadirga built in the period between the reigns of Sultans Murad III 1574 1595 and Mehmed IV 1648 1687 194 It is the only surviving original galley in the world 195 and has the world s oldest continuously maintained wooden hull 196 She was the personal galley of the sultan and remained in service until 1839 Reconstructions Edit A 1971 reconstruction of the Real the flagship of John of Austria in the Battle of Lepanto 1571 is in the Museu Maritim in Barcelona The ship was 60 m long and 6 2 m wide had a draught of 2 1 m weighing 239 tons empty was propelled by 290 rowers and carried about 400 crew and fighting soldiers at Lepanto She was substantially larger than the typical galleys of her time The Galata Museo del mare in Genoa has a 40 meter long full scale reconstruction of a 17th century Genoese galley 197 A group called The Trireme Trust operates in conjunction with the Greek Navy a reconstruction of an ancient Greek Trireme the Olympias 198 Ivlia is a replica Greek bireme built at Sochi on the Black Sea in 1989 which spent six seasons touring round Europe with volunteer crews The Nomos another trireme originally built for Clash of the Titans is preserved at the Charlestown Shipwreck amp Heritage Centre in Charlestown Cornwall 199 Archaeological finds Edit In 1965 the remains of a small Venetian galley fusta sunk in 1509 were found in Lake Garda Italy The vessel had been burned and only the lower hull remained 200 In the mid 1990s a sunken medieval galley was found close to the island of San Marco in Boccalama in the Venice Lagoon 201 The hull has been dated from the context and the C 14 analysis between the late 13th and early 14th century The excavation and the photogrammetric survey photogrammetry and 3D laser scanner of this important testimony of medieval nautical archaeology has started in 2001 through two complex executive phases 202 The stratigraphic excavation of the wreck was in fact performed entirely underwater according to the archaeological methodologies The survey of the hull was instead realized after the setting in dry the entire medieval perimeter of the submerged island This operation took place through the infixation of a continuous barrier consisting of sheet piles and the use of water pumps This long excavation and documentation campaign was directed by underwater archaeologist Marco D Agostino and as deputy director by his colleague Stefano Medas The lower hull is mostly intact It was not recovered due to high costs See also EditBorobudur ship Garay Lancaran Penjajap Kelulus Xebec Mong DongNotes Edit Pryor 2002 pp 86 87 Anderson 1962 pp 37 39 Henry George Liddell amp Robert Scott Galeos Archived 5 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine A Greek English Lexicon Oxford English Dictionary 2nd edition 1989 galley See for example Svenska Akademiens ordbok galeja Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine or galar Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine and Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal galeye Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Anderson 1962 pp 1 42 Lehmann 1984 p 12 The meaning of the word banked as in single banked double banked is different in the context of galleys from the propulsion of small boats by oar See Rowing Forward facing systems for an explanation of the small boat terminology Casson 1971 pp 53 56 Murray 2012 p 3 Casson Lionel Merchant Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 123 Rodger 1997 pp 66 68 a b Glete 1993 p 81 Winfield 2009 pp 116 118 Karl Heinz Marquardt The Fore and Aft Rigged Warship in Gardiner amp Lavery 1992 p 64 Mooney 1969 p 516 Blomfield R Massie January 1912 Man of War Boats II The Mariner s Mirror 2 1 7 9 doi 10 1080 00253359 1912 10654564 Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 10 a b Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 11 12 a b Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 21 23 Casson 1971 pp 53 60 Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 13 18 Casson Lionel Merchant Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 117 121 Casson 1971 pp 68 69 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 p 25 Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 28 34 Morrison Coates amp Rankov pp 32 35 Casson 1991 p 87 Casson 1991 pp 30 31 Casson 1991 pp 44 46 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 pp 27 32 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 pp 38 41 D B Saddington 2011 2007 Classes the Evolution of the Roman Imperial Fleets Archived 7 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Paul Erdkamp ed A Companion to the Roman Army 201 217 Malden Oxford Chichester Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1405121538 Plate 12 2 on p 204 Coarelli Filippo 1987 I Santuari del Lazio in eta repubblicana NIS Rome pp 35 84 a b Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 pp 48 49 Morrison John Hellenistic Oared Warships 399 31 BC in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 66 67 Casson Lionel Merchant Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 119 123 Rankov Boris Fleets of the Early Roman Empire 31 BC AD 324 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 78 80 Rankov Boris Fleets of the Early Roman Empire 31 BC AD 324 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 80 81 Rankov Boris Fleets of the Early Roman Empire 31 BC AD 324 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 82 85 Rodger 1997 pp 64 65 Unger 1980 pp 53 55 Unger 1980 pp 96 97 Unger 1980 p 80 Unger 1980 pp 75 76 Pirenne Mohammed and Charlemagne the thesis appears in chapters 1 2 of Medieval Cities 1925 Unger 1980 pp 40 47 Unger 1980 pp 102 104 Casson Lionel Merchant Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 123 126 Glete 2000 p 2 Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 105 106 Pryor 1992 pp 64 69 Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 107 Braudel The Perspective of the World vol III of Civilization and Capitalism 1979 1984 126 Higgins Courtney Rosali 2012 The Venetian Galley of Flanders From Medieval 2 Dimensional Treatises to 21st Century 3 Dimensional Model Master s thesis Texas A amp M University 1 Archived 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Fernand Braudel The Mediterranean in the Age of Philip II I 302 Pryor 1992 p 57 Mallett 1967 Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 109 111 Friel Ian Oars Sails and Guns the English and War at Sea c 1200 c 1500 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 70 Glete 2000 p 18 Glete 2000 p 23 Glete 2000 p 28 Guilmartin 1974 p 252 Glete 1993 p 114 Guilmartin 1974 p 101 Glete 1993 pp 114 115 Hanson Victor Davis 2007 Carnage and Culture Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0307425188 Archived from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Glete 2000 pp 154 163 Glete 2000 pp 156 158 159 Bamford 1973 p 12 Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 113 114 a b Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 112 Bamford 1973 p 12 Mott Lawrence V Iberian Naval Power 1000 1650 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 113 114 Goodman 1997 pp 11 13 Manguin Pierre Yves 1993 The Vanishing Jong Insular Southeast Asian Fleets in Trade and War in Reid 1993 pp 210 211 Manguin Pierre Yves 2012 Lancaran Ghurab and Ghali Mediterranean impact on war vessels in Early Modern Southeast Asia in Wade amp Li 2012 p 166 See especially Rodger 1996 Glete Jan Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 27 The British naval historian Nicholas Rodger describes this as a crisis in naval warfare which eventually led to the development of the galleon which combined ahead firing capabilities heavy broadside guns and a considerable increase in maneuverability by introduction of more advanced sailing rigs Rodger Nicholas A M The New Atlantic Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 245 For more detailed arguments concerning the development of broadside armament see Rodger 1996 Glete Jan Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 144 Guilmartin 1974 pp 264 266 Guilmartin 1974 p 254 Guilmartin 1974 p 57 Glete Jan Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 32 33 Glete 2000 p 183 a b Jan Glete The Oared Warship in Gardiner amp Lavery 1992 p 99 Rodger Nicholas A M The New Atlantic Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 170 Bamford 1974 pp 14 18 Figures from Glete 1993 p 251 and focus on standard war galleys and larger flagship galleys but excludes galeasses Venetian and Ottoman figures are approximates Figures for France Malta the Papal States Tuscany are more precise but are less exact for certain periods Bamford 1974 p 52 Bamford 1974 p 45 a b Lehmann 1984 p 12 Bamford 1974 pp 272 73 Bamford 1974 pp 23 25 Bamford 1974 pp 277 278 Bamford 1974 pp 272 273 Anderson 1962 pp 71 73 Glete 1992 p 99 Rodger 1997 pp 208 212 a b John Bennel The Oared Vessels in Knighton amp Loades 2000 pp 35 37 Rodger Nicholas A M The New Atlantic Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 230 230 see also R C Anderson Naval Wars in the Baltic pp 177 178 Glete Jan Naval Power and Control of the Sea in the Baltic in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 224 225 Anderson 1962 pp 91 93 Berg Skargardsflottans fartyg in Norman 2000 p 51 Glete Den ryska skargardsflottan in Norman 2000 p 81 Anderson 1962 p 95 Bondioli Mauro Burlet Rene amp Zysberg Andre Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Medieval and Later Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 205 Jan Glete Den ryska skargardsflottan Myt och verklighet in Norman 2000 pp 86 88 Based on Glete 1993 pp 707 709 Russian and Swedish figures are both approximates Baltic galleys were of similar construction as Mediterranean equivalents but usually smaller Few of them had more than 22 pairs of benches and many fewer than 16 Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 127 This flower inspired stern detail would later be widely used by both Greek and Roman ships Unger 1980 pp 41 42 Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 136 137 a b Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 133 134 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 pp 165 167 Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 137 138 Casson 1991 pp 135 136 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 27 April 2021 Retrieved 5 April 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 131 132 Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 138 140 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 p 77 Shaw 1995 pp 164 165 Hocker Frederick M Late Roman Byzantine and Islamic Galleys and Fleets in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 88 Rankov Boris Fleets of the Early Roman Empire 31 BC AD 324 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 80 83 Rankov Boris Fleets of the Early Roman Empire 31 BC AD 324 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 85 See both Bass and Pryor Morrison p 269 Landstrom Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 123 125 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 125 126 Pryor John H From dromon to galea Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500 1300 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 102 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 p 127 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 138 140 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 145 147 152 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 134 135 Pryor John H From dromon to galea Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500 1300 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 103 104 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 232 255 276 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 205 291 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 p 215 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 p 203 a b Pryor John H From dromon to galea Mediterranean bireme galleys AD 500 1300 in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 104 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 143 144 Anderson 1962 pp 52 54 55 Pryor 1992 p 64 Pryor 1992 pp 66 69 Anderson 1962 pp 55 56 Pryor refers to claims that stern rudders evolved by the Byzantines and Arabs as early as the 9th century but refutes it due to lack of evidence Anderson 1962 pp 59 60 Pryor 1992 p 61 Lehmann 1984 p 31 a b Guilmartin 1974 p 216 Guilmartin 1974 p 200 Lehmann 1984 pp 32 33 Jan Glete The Oared Warship in Gardiner amp Lavery 1992 p 98 Jan Glete The Oared Warship in Gardiner amp Lavery 1992 pp 98 100 Anderson 1962 p 17 Lehmann 1984 p 22 Morrison Coates amp Rankov The Athenian Trireme pp 246 247 Shaw J T Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 168 169 Morrison Coates amp Rankov The Athenian Trireme pp 249 52 a b Morrison Coates amp Rankov The Athenian Trireme pp 246 247 Coates 1995 pp 127 128 Shaw J T Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 169 Shaw J T Oar Mechanics and Oar Power in Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 p 163 Guilmartin 1974 pp 210 211 Morrison Coates amp Rankov The Athenian Trireme p 248 Pryor 1992 pp 71 75 Casson 1971 pp 325 326 Rachel L Sargent The Use of Slaves by the Athenians in Warfare Classical Philology Vol 22 No 3 Jul 1927 pp 264 279 Lionel Casson Galley Slaves Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association Vol 97 1966 pp 35 44 Unger 1980 p 36 From Italian remo di scaloccio from scala ladder staircase Anderson 1962 p 69 Guilmartin 1974 pp 226 227 Guilmartin 1974 pp 109 112 Guilmartin 1974 pp 114 119 Unger 1980 pp 47 49 Basch 2001 p 64 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 pp 153 159 Pryor 1992 p 42 Wachsmann Shelley Paddled and Oared Ships Before the Iron Age in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 28 34 72 Morrison Coates amp Rankov 2000 pp 42 43 92 93 Coates John The Naval Architecture and Oar Systems of Ancient Galleys in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 133 135 Casson 1991 p 139 Casson 1991 pp 90 91 a b Hocker Frederick M Late Roman Byzantine and Islamic Galleys and Fleets in Morrison amp Gardiner 1995 pp 95 98 99 Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 p 282 Pryor 1983 pp 193 194 Pryor 1983 pp 184 188 Pryor 1983 p 194 Rose 2002 pp 133 Guilmartin 1974 pp 157 158 Guilmartin 1974 pp 199 200 Guilmartin 1974 pp 248 249 Jan Glete Vasatidens galarflottor in Norman 2000 pp 39 42 Rodger Nicholas A M The New Atlantic Naval Warfare in the Sixteenth Century in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 p 237 For more information on the royal flotilla of Louis XIV see Amelie Halna du Fretay La flottille du Grand Canal de Versailles a l epoque de Louis XIV diversite technicite et prestige Archived 11 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine in French Bamford 1974 pp 24 25 Bamford 1974 pp 275 278 Bamford 1973 pp 11 12 Bamford 1973 p 282 The Historical Galley denizmuzesi dzkk tsk tr 24 November 2021 Archived from the original on 8 October 2021 Cornucopia Magazine www cornucopia net Retrieved 16 March 2022 Center for Maritime Archaeology and Conservation Texas A amp M University nautarch tamu edu Retrieved 24 November 2021 Genoa Maritime Museum Visit the Museum Car Parks and Useful Info Discover Genoa in Italian 14 September 2019 Retrieved 24 December 2021 The Trireme Trust Archived from the original on 28 January 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2020 Cornwall goes to the movies 26 May 2014 Archived from the original on 10 October 2018 Retrieved 10 October 2018 Scandurra Enrico 1972 pp 209 210 AA VV 2003 La galea di San Marco in Boccalama Valutazioni scientifiche per un progetto di recupero ADA Saggi 1 Venice D Agostino Medas 2003 Excavation and Recording of the medieval Hulls at San Marco in Boccalama Venice the INA Quarterly Institute of Nautical Archaeology 30 1 Spring 2003 pp 22 28References EditAnderson Roger Charles Oared fighting ships From classical times to the coming of steam London 1962 Bamford Paul W Fighting ships and prisons the Mediterranean Galleys of France in the Age of Louis XIV Cambridge University Press London 1974 ISBN 0816606552 Basch L amp Frost H Another Punic wreck off Sicily its ram in International journal of Nautical Archaeology vol 4 2 1975 pp 201 228 Bass George F editor A History of Seafaring Thames amp Hudson 1972 Gardiner Robert amp Lavery Brian editors The Line of Battle Sailing Warships 1650 1840 Conway Maritime Press London 1992 ISBN 0851775616 Casson Lionel Galley Slaves in Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association Vol 97 1966 pp 35 44 Casson Lionel Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World Princeton University Press 1971 Casson Lionel The Ancient Mariners Seafarers and Sea Fighters of the Mediterranean in Ancient Times Princeton University Press Princeton NJ 1991 ISBN 0691068364 D Agostino Marco amp Medas Stefano Excavation and Recording of the medieval Hulls at San Marco in Boccalama Venice the INA Quarterly Institute of Nautical Archaeology 30 1 Spring 2003 pp 22 28 Glete Jan Navies and nations Warships navies and state building in Europe and America 1500 1860 Almqvist amp Wiksell International Stockholm 1993 ISBN 9122015655 Glete Jan Warfare at Sea 1500 1650 Maritime Conflicts and the Transformation of Europe Routledge London 2000 ISBN 0415214556 Guilmartin John Francis Gunpowder and Galleys Changing Technology and Mediterranean Warfare at Sea in the Sixteenth Century Cambridge University Press London 1974 ISBN 0521202728 Hattendorf John B amp Unger Richard W editors War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Woodbridge Suffolk 2003 ISBN 0851159036 War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Knighton C S and Loades David M The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII s Navy Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with related documents Ashgate Publishing Aldershot 2000 ISBN 0754600947 Lehmann L Th Galleys in the Netherlands Meulenhoff Amsterdam 1984 ISBN 9029018542 Morrison John S amp Gardiner Robert editors The Age of the Galley Mediterranean Oared Vessels Since Pre Classical Times Conway Maritime London 1995 ISBN 0851775543 Mallett Michael E 1967 The Florentine Galleys in the Fifteenth Century with the Diary of Luca di Maso degli Albizzi Captain of the Galleys 1429 1430 Clarendon Press Oxford 1967 Mooney James L editor Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Volume 4 Naval Historical Center Washington 1969 Morrison John S Coates John F amp Rankov Boris The Athenian Trireme the History and Reconstruction of An Ancient Greek Warship Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2000 ISBN 0521564565 Murray William 2012 The Age of Titans The Rise and Fall of the Great Hellenistic Navies Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 978 0195388640 Norman Hans editor Skargardsflottan uppbyggnad militar anvandning och forankring i det svenska samhallet 1700 1824 Historiska media Lund 2000 ISBN 9188930505 in Swedish Pryor John H The naval battles of Roger of Lauria in Journal of Medieval History 9 Amsterdam 1983 pp 179 216 Pryor John H Geography technology and war Studies in the maritime history of the Mediterranean 649 1571 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1992 ISBN 0521428920 Geography Technology and War Studies in the Maritime History of the Mediterranean 649 1571 Reid Anthony editor Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era Trade Power and Belief Cornell University Press Ithaca NY 1993 ISBN 978 1501732171 Rodger Nicholas A M The Development of Broadside Gunnery 1450 1650 Mariner s Mirror 82 1996 pp 301 324 Rodger Nicholas A M The Safeguard of the Sea A Naval History of Britain 660 1649 W W Norton amp Company New York 1997 ISBN 039304579X Rose Susan Medieval Naval Warfare 1000 1500 Routledge London 2002 ISBN 978 0415239776 Rodgers William Ledyard Naval Warfare Under Oars 4th to 16th Centuries Naval Institute Press 1940 Unger Richard W The Ship in Medieval Economy 600 1600 Croom Helm London 1980 ISBN 085664949X Wade Geoff amp Li Tana Anthony Reid and the Study of the Southeast Asian Past Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Singapore 2012 ISBN 978 9814311960 Winfield Rif 2009 British Warships in the Age of Sail 1603 1714 Design Construction Careers and Fates Seaforth Barnsley ISBN 978 1848320406External links Edit Look up galley in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Galleys Galley Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 John F Guilmartin The Tactics of the Battle of Lepanto Clarified The Impact of Social Economic and Political Factors on Sixteenth Century Galley Warfare A very detailed discussion of galley warfare at the Battle of Lepanto Rafael Rebolo Gomez The Carthaginian navy 2005 Treballs del Museu Arqueologic d Eivissa e Formentera in Spanish Some Engineering Concepts applied to Ancient Greek Trireme Warships John Coates University of Oxford The 18th Jenkin Lecture 1 October 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Galley amp oldid 1151078503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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