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Nautilus (fictional submarine)

Nautilus is the fictional submarine belonging to Captain Nemo featured in Jules Verne's novels Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1870) and The Mysterious Island (1875). Verne named the Nautilus after Robert Fulton's real-life submarine Nautilus (1800).[1] For the design of the Nautilus, Verne was inspired by the French Navy submarine Plongeur, a model of which he had seen at the 1867 Exposition Universelle, three years before writing his novel.[2]

The "Plongeur" inspiration for the Nautilus
Nautilus under way
Nautilus, as pictured in The Mysterious Island

Description edit

Nautilus is described by Verne as "a masterpiece containing masterpieces".[3] It is designed and commanded by Captain Nemo. Electricity provided by sodium/mercury batteries (with the sodium provided by extraction from seawater) is the craft's primary power source for propulsion and other services. The energy needed to extract the sodium is provided by coal mined from the sea floor.[4]

Nautilus is double-hulled,[5] and is further separated into water-tight compartments. Its top speed is 43 knots (50 mph).[4] In Captain Nemo's own words:

Here, Professor Aronnax, are the different dimensions of this boat now transporting you. It's a very long cylinder with conical ends. It noticeably takes the shape of a cigar, a shape already adopted in London for several projects of the same kind. The length of this cylinder from end to end is exactly seventy meters, and its maximum breadth of beam is eight meters. So it isn't quite built on the ten–to–one ratio of your high–speed steamers; but its lines are sufficiently long, and their tapering gradual enough, so that the displaced water easily slips past and poses no obstacle to the ship's movements. These two dimensions allow you to obtain, via a simple calculation, the surface area and volume of the Nautilus. Its surface area totals 1,011.45 square meters, its volume 1,507.2 cubic meters—which is tantamount to saying that when it's completely submerged, it displaces 1,500 cubic meters of water, or weighs 1,500 metric tons.[5]

Nautilus uses floodable tanks in order to adjust buoyancy and so control its depth. The pumps that evacuate these tanks of water are so powerful that they produce large jets of water when the vessel emerges rapidly from the surface of the water. This leads many early observers of Nautilus to believe that the vessel is some species of marine mammal, or perhaps a sea monster not yet known to science. To submerge deeply in a short time, Nautilus uses a technique called "hydroplaning", in which the vessel dives down at a steep angle.[5]

Nautilus supports a crew that gathers food from the sea.[6] Nautilus includes a galley for preparing these foods, which includes a machine that makes drinking water from seawater through distillation.[4] Nautilus is not able to refresh its air supply, so Captain Nemo designed it to do this by surfacing and exchanging stale air for fresh, much like a whale.[4] Nautilus is capable of extended voyages without refueling or otherwise restocking supplies. Its maximum dive time is around five days.

Much of the ship is decorated to standards of luxury that are unequalled in a seagoing vessel of the time. These include a library containing about twelve thousand books, with boxed collections of valuable oceanic specimens. The library is also filled with expensive paintings and other works of art.[7] Nautilus also features a lavish dining room[6] and even an organ that Captain Nemo uses to entertain himself in the evening. By comparison, Nemo's personal quarters are very sparsely furnished but do feature duplicates of the bridge instruments so that the captain can keep track of the vessel without being present on the bridge.[7] These amenities however, are only available to Nemo, Professor Aronnax, and his companions.

From her attacks on ships, using a ramming prow to puncture target vessels below the waterline, the world thinks it a sea monster, but later identifies it as an underwater vessel capable of great destructive power, after Abraham Lincoln is attacked and Ned Land strikes the metallic surface of Nautilus with his harpoon.

Its parts are built to order by companies including Creusot and Cail & Co. in France, Pen & Co. and Laird's in England, Scott's in Scotland, Krupp in Prussia, the Motala workshops in Sweden, and Hart Bros. in the United States. Then they are assembled by Nemo's men on a desert island.[5] Nautilus returned to this island, where Nemo later helped castaways in the novel The Mysterious Island. After Nemo dies on board, the volcanic island erupts, entombing the Captain and Nautilus for eternity.

Claimed links between Captain Nemo's Nautilus and the Confederate warship CSS Alabama edit

In 1998 the Jules Verne scholar William Butcher was the first to identify a possible link between the Birkenhead, England built CSS Alabama and Captain Nemo's Nautilus. The CSS Alabama was a warship built in secrecy for the Confederate States by Lairds shipyard of Birkenhead, England in the American Civil War. Butcher stated, "The Alabama, which claimed to have sunk 75 merchantmen, was destroyed by the Unionist Kearsarge off Cherbourg on 11 June 1864... This battle has clear connections with Nemo's final attack, also in the English Channel."[8]

Jules Verne had himself made a previous comparison between the Birkenhead built CSS Alabama and the Nautilus in a letter to his publisher Pierre-Jules Hetzel in March 1869.[9]

In September 2021 the Birkenhead born geography teacher John Lamb noted that both the hull of the fictional Nautilus and the hull of the real-life Confederate warship CSS Alabama had been built in secret at the Laird's shipyard in Birkenhead, lying opposite the port of Liverpool.[10][11] Furthermore, both vessels had been completed on a ‘desert island’ – in the case of the Alabama, on the Azores island of Terceira.

 
Captain Nemo explains how he built the Nautilus, an image from Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1866-69) drawn by George Roux.

In Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1869) Captain Nemo explains how he built the Nautilus: "Each of its components, Dr Aronnax, was sent to me from a different point on the globe via a forwarding address... the iron plates for its hull by Laird’s of Liverpool…. I set up my workshops on a small desert island in the middle of the ocean. There with my workmen, that is my good companions whom I instructed and trained, I completed our Nautilus."[10]

According to the historian Stephen Fox, Captain Raphael Semmes had portraits of General Robert E Lee and the Confederate President Jefferson Davis on the cabin wall of the CSS Alabama.[12] In Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas, Captain Nemo has portraits of Abraham Lincoln and the radical abolitionist John Brown adorning the cabin walls of the Nautilus.[13] Semmes was a supporter of slavery[14] while Captain Nemo is a militant antislaver.[13]

The two-year voyage of the CSS Alabama had covered a distance of approximately 75,000 miles[15] which equates to just over 21,700 leagues in the Nautilus[16] and Verne may have chosen Captain Nemo’s motto of ‘Mobilis in Mobile’ (sometimes changed to Mobilis in Mobili)[17] quite simply because the captain of the CSS Alabama, Raphael Semmes, was a part time lawyer from Mobile, Alabama.[18]

In 1869 Captain Semmes released his American Civil War memoirs entitled Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States.[19] In the same year of 1869, Jules Verne released his classic novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas. John Lamb catalogued the many similarities between the two books on his website "Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead" in August 2022.[20]

John Lamb hypothesized that to Jules Verne the CSS Alabama and Captain Nemo's Nautilus might essentially be one and the same[11] and that the militant abolitionist Captain Nemo is the ‘alter ego’ of the pro slavery Raphael Semmes – i.e. the ‘opposite of oneself’[21][22]

In their respective books, Memoirs Afloat During the War Between the States (1869) and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1869), both Raphael Semmes[19] and Jules Verne[23] mention world shipping being alarmed by a destructive maritime force which is compared to a ‘sea monster’. In both books the monster is jeered at in the press[19][24] and celebrated in song (see "Roll, Alabama, Roll").[24]

 
The Abraham Lincoln sails in search of the 'sea monster'.

Raphael Semmes was denounced by Abraham Lincoln as a ‘pirate’[25] and a bounty put on his head[26] by the U.S Navy Department of Admiral David Farragut.[19] The fictional Captain Nemo is also denounced as a pirate in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas[23] and the Nautilus is chased by a warship called the USS Abraham Lincoln,[23] whose commander, a Captain Farragut, offers a reward for the first sighting of the ‘sea monster’.[23]

Both Raphael Semmes and Jules Verne talk about their respective vessels as being illuminated by an eerie light[19][23] and slowly moving in circles around their ‘prey’.[19][23] The CSS Alabama and the Nautilus both have a specialized recess in their hull,[19][23] and a state-of-the-art water condenser on board to provide fresh water[27][23] for their multinational crews.[19][23]

Both the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus encounter an imaginary island,[19][23] sail through a patch of white water,[19][23] have an aversion for the coast of Brazil,[19][23] but still pause to describe the fresh waters of the Amazon as they pour in to the sea.[19][23]

Raphael Semmes seeks sanctuary for the CSS Alabama on the Brazilian volcanic island of Fernando de Noronha,[19] where he takes on coal from his supply ship Agrippina[28] whereas Captain Nemo seeks sanctuary for the Nautilus within the flooded crater of a secret volcanic island where his crew proceed to mine their own coal.[23]

On the respective voyages of both the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus an elaborate funeral is described in detail and both captains are visibly overcome with emotion.[19][23] while both authors talk about a grave / mausoleum sealed up by coral over time.[19][23]

Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo describe the nature and the effects of the Gulf Stream in detail,[19][29] both have a ‘museum of curiosities’ gathered on dingy trips,[19][29] and while Raphael Semmes collects an Amazonian seed pod that looks like a Havanna cigar,[19] Captain Nemo gives Doctor Aronnax a seaweed cigar which Doctor Aronnax mistakes for a Havanna cigar.[29]

Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo talk about sleeping sperm whales[19][29] and highlight the dangers to right whales in venturing into the warm waters near the equator.[19][29] Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo kill a single albatross,[19][29] sail through swarms of argonauts / nautilus,[19][29] and refer to food that a Malay would cook.[19][30]

 
Captain Nemo is the Indian Prince Dakkar. Illustration from Jules Verne's Mysterious Island.

Raphael Semmes claims a fully grown swordfish can pierce a ship’s wooden hull while Doctor Aronnax claims a giant Narwhal’s tusk can pierce a ship’s hull.[19][29]

Both Raphael Semmes and Jules Verne describe the journey across the Indian Ocean as tedious to everyone but the natural historian,[19][29] and then come across ships from the P and O Line.[19][31] Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo pride themselves on their good manners and hospitality,[19][31] but both lament the passing of sail to be replaced by steam.[19][31]

Whereas Raphael Semmes comments at length on the sinking of the Liverpool built Confederate commerce raider CSS Florida[19] it is Captain Nemo and the Nautilus who come across the remains of a ship called the Florida[31] (a Confederate link first identified by the Jules Verne scholar William Butcher in 1998).[32]

Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo pay tribute to the oceanographer Matthew Fontaine Maury[19][29] and comment on his fall from grace after the American Civil War.[19][33] Whereas Captain Semmes compares the CSS Alabama to his wife[19] Captain Nemo compares the Nautilus to himself.[29] Raphael Semmes laments the loss of the British built CSS Alabama and its largely British crew as if it were the loss of his wife and children,[19][27] whereas Captain Nemo laments the actual loss of his wife and children – killed by the British.[29][34] Whereas Raphael Semmes states that India should never be free from British rule,[19] Captain Nemo is later revealed to be an Indian who fought to be free from British rule.

In the 1875 sequel novel to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas entitled The Mysterious Island Captain Nemo returns and is revealed as the rebel Indian Prince Dakkar, a possible derivation of the Afrikaan CSS Alabama celebratory song Daar Kom die Alibama ('Here Comes the Alabama') whereby moving the letter 'k' two spaces to the left gives the phrase Dakar om die Alibama.[22]

In November 2021, Alan Evans, the Director of Regeneration and Place at Wirral Borough Council, endorsed the further claim of John Lamb that Jules Verne had set his sequel novel The Mysterious Island in Birkenhead and the Wirral Peninsula, so confirming that the Nautilus and Captain Nemo had indeed returned back to their spiritual home of Birkenhead – also the home port of the CSS Alabama.[35]

Notable appearances edit

Beside their original appearances in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island, Nautilus and Captain Nemo have appeared in numerous other works.

In the 1954 film adaptation of the first novel and in The Return of Captain Nemo, it is suggested that Nautilus is powered by nuclear energy (discovered by Nemo himself), and that Nemo uses the same energy to destroy Vulcania, Nautilus's base island.

In the 1969 film Captain Nemo and the Underwater City, Nautilus and its sister ship Nautilus II are depicted as industrialised stingray-like vessels, flattened with pronounced tumblehomes supporting rounded deckhouses. Each has a heavy girderwork tail, at the tip of which twin rudders and diving planes are mounted.

In Kevin J. Anderson's Captain Nemo: The Fantastic History of a Dark Genius, Nautilus appears as a real submarine, apparently cigar-shaped like the one from the novel, built by Nemo for the Ottoman Empire.

In Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Nautilus features with a squid-like appearance in the graphic novel and a more traditional – albeit extremely tall – submarine in the film. Toward the closing stages of the film, antagonist "The Fantom" has stolen Nemo's design and begun construction of multiple submarines dubbed "Nautili" by Skinner.

The Nautilus is also featured in the Rick Riordan young adult novel Daughter of the Deep. The book is set in the world of 20,000 Leagues, but six generations after the events described in Jules Verne's book.

Other Verne submarines edit

Submarines feature in some other of Verne's works. In the 1896 novel Facing the Flag, the pirate Ker Karraje uses an unnamed submarine that acts both as a tug to his schooner Ebba and for ramming and destroying ships which are the targets of his piracy. The same book also features HMS Sword, a small Royal Navy experimental submarine which is sunk after a valiant but unequal struggle with the pirate submarine. In the book The Master of the World, Robur's secondary vehicle, Terror, is a strange flying machine with submarine, automobile and speedboat capabilities. It briefly eludes naval forces on the Great Lakes by diving.

Images edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Skrabec, Quentin R. (2005). The Metallurgic Age: The Victorian Flowering of Invention and Industrial Science (revised ed.). Jefferson NC: McFarland. p. 44. ISBN 9781476611136. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  2. ^ Notice at the Musée de la Marine, Rochefort
  3. ^ Verne, Jules. The Mysterious Island. Translated by Frederick Paul Walter – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ a b c d Verne, Jules. 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas. Translated by Frederick Paul Walter – via Wikisource.
  5. ^ a b c d Verne, Jules. 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas. Translated by Frederick Paul Walter. ISBN 978-1-4384-3238-0 – via Wikisource.
  6. ^ a b Verne, Jules. 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas. Translated by Frederick Paul Walter. ISBN 978-1-4384-3238-0 – via Wikisource.
  7. ^ a b Verne, Jules. 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas. Translated by Frederick Paul Walter. ISBN 978-1-4384-3238-0 – via Wikisource.
  8. ^ William Butcher Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas - Jules Verne - Google Books Explanatory Notes Page 422 ISBN 0-19-282839-8
  9. ^ Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas - Jules Verne - Google Books Explanatory Notes Page 422 ISBN 0-19-282839-8
  10. ^ a b Verne, Jules. "20,000 Leagues Under the Seas (Walter)". Retrieved 23 October 2022 – via Wikisource.
  11. ^ a b "Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead. Part 31. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Part One" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 10 August 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  12. ^ Wolf of the Deep. Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama. Stephen Fox p50. ISBN 978-1-4000-9542-1
  13. ^ a b Verne, Jules. "20,000 Leagues Under the Seas (Walter)". Retrieved 23 October 2022 – via Wikisource.
  14. ^ Semmes, Raphael (16 March 1869). "Memoirs of Service Afloat: During the War Between the States". Kelly, Piet & Company – via Google Books.
  15. ^ "USS Kearsarge sinks CSS Alabama". www.history.com. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  16. ^ "Miles to Nautical Leagues conversion". www.metric-conversions.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  17. ^ Derdzinski, Mark (January 2007). "Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea". The Explicator. 65 (2): 91–94. doi:10.3200/EXPL.65.2.91-94. S2CID 162309689.
  18. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat, During the War Between the States, by Raphael Semmes". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat, During the War Between the States, by Raphael Semmes". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  20. ^ "Jules Verne – Just another WordPress site". Jules Verne. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  21. ^ "alter ego". Collins English Dictionary. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  22. ^ a b John Lamb. "Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead - Part 25" (PDF).
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  24. ^ a b "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne". www.gutenberg.org.
  25. ^ Ch XVI P178 Line 10
  26. ^ Fox, Stephen. Wolf of the Deep: Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama p93 Vintage Books, 2007. ISBN 978-1-4000-9542-1.
  27. ^ a b "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat, During the War Between the States, by Raphael Semmes". www.gutenberg.org.
  28. ^ "XLIII p604 line 14". Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  30. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  31. ^ a b c d "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne". www.gutenberg.org.
  32. ^ Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. William Butcher translation (1998) ISBN 0-19-282839-8 p408
  33. ^ William Butcher translation Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1998) ISBN 0-19-282839-8 Ch 14 P91 line 3
  34. ^ Sidney Kravitz translation The Mysterious Island p590 ISBN 978-0-8195-6559-4
  35. ^ "Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 4 November 2021. Retrieved 7 October 2022.

External links edit

  Media related to Nautilus (Jules Verne) at Wikimedia Commons

  • Jules Verne's text in 20,000 Leagues under the Seas provides a great deal of information about Nautilus as discussed on this page: Jules Verne's Nautilus. Many artists and ordinary folk have envisioned over the decades their own interpretations of Nautilus: A Catalog of Nautilus Designs

nautilus, fictional, submarine, nautilus, redirects, here, other, ships, same, name, ships, named, nautilus, other, uses, nautilus, disambiguation, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline,. The Nautilus redirects here For other ships of the same name see Ships named Nautilus For other uses see Nautilus disambiguation This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nautilus is the fictional submarine belonging to Captain Nemo featured in Jules Verne s novels Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 1870 and The Mysterious Island 1875 Verne named the Nautilus after Robert Fulton s real life submarine Nautilus 1800 1 For the design of the Nautilus Verne was inspired by the French Navy submarine Plongeur a model of which he had seen at the 1867 Exposition Universelle three years before writing his novel 2 The Plongeur inspiration for the Nautilus Nautilus under way Nautilus as pictured in The Mysterious Island Contents 1 Description 2 Claimed links between Captain Nemo s Nautilus and the Confederate warship CSS Alabama 3 Notable appearances 4 Other Verne submarines 5 Images 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksDescription editNautilus is described by Verne as a masterpiece containing masterpieces 3 It is designed and commanded by Captain Nemo Electricity provided by sodium mercury batteries with the sodium provided by extraction from seawater is the craft s primary power source for propulsion and other services The energy needed to extract the sodium is provided by coal mined from the sea floor 4 Nautilus is double hulled 5 and is further separated into water tight compartments Its top speed is 43 knots 50 mph 4 In Captain Nemo s own words Here Professor Aronnax are the different dimensions of this boat now transporting you It s a very long cylinder with conical ends It noticeably takes the shape of a cigar a shape already adopted in London for several projects of the same kind The length of this cylinder from end to end is exactly seventy meters and its maximum breadth of beam is eight meters So it isn t quite built on the ten to one ratio of your high speed steamers but its lines are sufficiently long and their tapering gradual enough so that the displaced water easily slips past and poses no obstacle to the ship s movements These two dimensions allow you to obtain via a simple calculation the surface area and volume of the Nautilus Its surface area totals 1 011 45 square meters its volume 1 507 2 cubic meters which is tantamount to saying that when it s completely submerged it displaces 1 500 cubic meters of water or weighs 1 500 metric tons 5 Nautilus uses floodable tanks in order to adjust buoyancy and so control its depth The pumps that evacuate these tanks of water are so powerful that they produce large jets of water when the vessel emerges rapidly from the surface of the water This leads many early observers of Nautilus to believe that the vessel is some species of marine mammal or perhaps a sea monster not yet known to science To submerge deeply in a short time Nautilus uses a technique called hydroplaning in which the vessel dives down at a steep angle 5 Nautilus supports a crew that gathers food from the sea 6 Nautilus includes a galley for preparing these foods which includes a machine that makes drinking water from seawater through distillation 4 Nautilus is not able to refresh its air supply so Captain Nemo designed it to do this by surfacing and exchanging stale air for fresh much like a whale 4 Nautilus is capable of extended voyages without refueling or otherwise restocking supplies Its maximum dive time is around five days Much of the ship is decorated to standards of luxury that are unequalled in a seagoing vessel of the time These include a library containing about twelve thousand books with boxed collections of valuable oceanic specimens The library is also filled with expensive paintings and other works of art 7 Nautilus also features a lavish dining room 6 and even an organ that Captain Nemo uses to entertain himself in the evening By comparison Nemo s personal quarters are very sparsely furnished but do feature duplicates of the bridge instruments so that the captain can keep track of the vessel without being present on the bridge 7 These amenities however are only available to Nemo Professor Aronnax and his companions From her attacks on ships using a ramming prow to puncture target vessels below the waterline the world thinks it a sea monster but later identifies it as an underwater vessel capable of great destructive power after Abraham Lincoln is attacked and Ned Land strikes the metallic surface of Nautilus with his harpoon Its parts are built to order by companies including Creusot and Cail amp Co in France Pen amp Co and Laird s in England Scott s in Scotland Krupp in Prussia the Motala workshops in Sweden and Hart Bros in the United States Then they are assembled by Nemo s men on a desert island 5 Nautilus returned to this island where Nemo later helped castaways in the novel The Mysterious Island After Nemo dies on board the volcanic island erupts entombing the Captain and Nautilus for eternity Claimed links between Captain Nemo s Nautilus and the Confederate warship CSS Alabama editIn 1998 the Jules Verne scholar William Butcher was the first to identify a possible link between the Birkenhead England built CSS Alabama and Captain Nemo s Nautilus The CSS Alabama was a warship built in secrecy for the Confederate States by Lairds shipyard of Birkenhead England in the American Civil War Butcher stated The Alabama which claimed to have sunk 75 merchantmen was destroyed by the Unionist Kearsarge off Cherbourg on 11 June 1864 This battle has clear connections with Nemo s final attack also in the English Channel 8 Jules Verne had himself made a previous comparison between the Birkenhead built CSS Alabama and the Nautilus in a letter to his publisher Pierre Jules Hetzel in March 1869 9 In September 2021 the Birkenhead born geography teacher John Lamb noted that both the hull of the fictional Nautilus and the hull of the real life Confederate warship CSS Alabama had been built in secret at the Laird s shipyard in Birkenhead lying opposite the port of Liverpool 10 11 Furthermore both vessels had been completed on a desert island in the case of the Alabama on the Azores island of Terceira nbsp Captain Nemo explains how he built the Nautilus an image from Jules Verne s novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 1866 69 drawn by George Roux In Jules Verne s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 1869 Captain Nemo explains how he built the Nautilus Each of its components Dr Aronnax was sent to me from a different point on the globe via a forwarding address the iron plates for its hull by Laird s of Liverpool I set up my workshops on a small desert island in the middle of the ocean There with my workmen that is my good companions whom I instructed and trained I completed our Nautilus 10 According to the historian Stephen Fox Captain Raphael Semmes had portraits of General Robert E Lee and the Confederate President Jefferson Davis on the cabin wall of the CSS Alabama 12 In Jules Verne s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas Captain Nemo has portraits of Abraham Lincoln and the radical abolitionist John Brown adorning the cabin walls of the Nautilus 13 Semmes was a supporter of slavery 14 while Captain Nemo is a militant antislaver 13 The two year voyage of the CSS Alabama had covered a distance of approximately 75 000 miles 15 which equates to just over 21 700 leagues in the Nautilus 16 and Verne may have chosen Captain Nemo s motto of Mobilis in Mobile sometimes changed to Mobilis in Mobili 17 quite simply because the captain of the CSS Alabama Raphael Semmes was a part time lawyer from Mobile Alabama 18 In 1869 Captain Semmes released his American Civil War memoirs entitled Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States 19 In the same year of 1869 Jules Verne released his classic novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas John Lamb catalogued the many similarities between the two books on his website Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead in August 2022 20 John Lamb hypothesized that to Jules Verne the CSS Alabama and Captain Nemo s Nautilus might essentially be one and the same 11 and that the militant abolitionist Captain Nemo is the alter ego of the pro slavery Raphael Semmes i e the opposite of oneself 21 22 In their respective books Memoirs Afloat During the War Between the States 1869 and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 1869 both Raphael Semmes 19 and Jules Verne 23 mention world shipping being alarmed by a destructive maritime force which is compared to a sea monster In both books the monster is jeered at in the press 19 24 and celebrated in song see Roll Alabama Roll 24 nbsp The Abraham Lincoln sails in search of the sea monster Raphael Semmes was denounced by Abraham Lincoln as a pirate 25 and a bounty put on his head 26 by the U S Navy Department of Admiral David Farragut 19 The fictional Captain Nemo is also denounced as a pirate in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 23 and the Nautilus is chased by a warship called the USS Abraham Lincoln 23 whose commander a Captain Farragut offers a reward for the first sighting of the sea monster 23 Both Raphael Semmes and Jules Verne talk about their respective vessels as being illuminated by an eerie light 19 23 and slowly moving in circles around their prey 19 23 The CSS Alabama and the Nautilus both have a specialized recess in their hull 19 23 and a state of the art water condenser on board to provide fresh water 27 23 for their multinational crews 19 23 Both the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus encounter an imaginary island 19 23 sail through a patch of white water 19 23 have an aversion for the coast of Brazil 19 23 but still pause to describe the fresh waters of the Amazon as they pour in to the sea 19 23 Raphael Semmes seeks sanctuary for the CSS Alabama on the Brazilian volcanic island of Fernando de Noronha 19 where he takes on coal from his supply ship Agrippina 28 whereas Captain Nemo seeks sanctuary for the Nautilus within the flooded crater of a secret volcanic island where his crew proceed to mine their own coal 23 On the respective voyages of both the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus an elaborate funeral is described in detail and both captains are visibly overcome with emotion 19 23 while both authors talk about a grave mausoleum sealed up by coral over time 19 23 Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo describe the nature and the effects of the Gulf Stream in detail 19 29 both have a museum of curiosities gathered on dingy trips 19 29 and while Raphael Semmes collects an Amazonian seed pod that looks like a Havanna cigar 19 Captain Nemo gives Doctor Aronnax a seaweed cigar which Doctor Aronnax mistakes for a Havanna cigar 29 Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo talk about sleeping sperm whales 19 29 and highlight the dangers to right whales in venturing into the warm waters near the equator 19 29 Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo kill a single albatross 19 29 sail through swarms of argonauts nautilus 19 29 and refer to food that a Malay would cook 19 30 nbsp Captain Nemo is the Indian Prince Dakkar Illustration from Jules Verne s Mysterious Island Raphael Semmes claims a fully grown swordfish can pierce a ship s wooden hull while Doctor Aronnax claims a giant Narwhal s tusk can pierce a ship s hull 19 29 Both Raphael Semmes and Jules Verne describe the journey across the Indian Ocean as tedious to everyone but the natural historian 19 29 and then come across ships from the P and O Line 19 31 Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo pride themselves on their good manners and hospitality 19 31 but both lament the passing of sail to be replaced by steam 19 31 Whereas Raphael Semmes comments at length on the sinking of the Liverpool built Confederate commerce raider CSS Florida 19 it is Captain Nemo and the Nautilus who come across the remains of a ship called the Florida 31 a Confederate link first identified by the Jules Verne scholar William Butcher in 1998 32 Both Raphael Semmes and Captain Nemo pay tribute to the oceanographer Matthew Fontaine Maury 19 29 and comment on his fall from grace after the American Civil War 19 33 Whereas Captain Semmes compares the CSS Alabama to his wife 19 Captain Nemo compares the Nautilus to himself 29 Raphael Semmes laments the loss of the British built CSS Alabama and its largely British crew as if it were the loss of his wife and children 19 27 whereas Captain Nemo laments the actual loss of his wife and children killed by the British 29 34 Whereas Raphael Semmes states that India should never be free from British rule 19 Captain Nemo is later revealed to be an Indian who fought to be free from British rule In the 1875 sequel novel to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas entitled The Mysterious Island Captain Nemo returns and is revealed as the rebel Indian Prince Dakkar a possible derivation of the Afrikaan CSS Alabama celebratory song Daar Kom die Alibama Here Comes the Alabama whereby moving the letter k two spaces to the left gives the phrase Dakar om die Alibama 22 In November 2021 Alan Evans the Director of Regeneration and Place at Wirral Borough Council endorsed the further claim of John Lamb that Jules Verne had set his sequel novel The Mysterious Island in Birkenhead and the Wirral Peninsula so confirming that the Nautilus and Captain Nemo had indeed returned back to their spiritual home of Birkenhead also the home port of the CSS Alabama 35 Notable appearances editBeside their original appearances in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island Nautilus and Captain Nemo have appeared in numerous other works In the 1954 film adaptation of the first novel and in The Return of Captain Nemo it is suggested that Nautilus is powered by nuclear energy discovered by Nemo himself and that Nemo uses the same energy to destroy Vulcania Nautilus s base island In the 1969 film Captain Nemo and the Underwater City Nautilus and its sister ship Nautilus II are depicted as industrialised stingray like vessels flattened with pronounced tumblehomes supporting rounded deckhouses Each has a heavy girderwork tail at the tip of which twin rudders and diving planes are mounted In Kevin J Anderson s Captain Nemo The Fantastic History of a Dark Genius Nautilus appears as a real submarine apparently cigar shaped like the one from the novel built by Nemo for the Ottoman Empire In Alan Moore and Kevin O Neill s The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Nautilus features with a squid like appearance in the graphic novel and a more traditional albeit extremely tall submarine in the film Toward the closing stages of the film antagonist The Fantom has stolen Nemo s design and begun construction of multiple submarines dubbed Nautili by Skinner The Nautilus is also featured in the Rick Riordan young adult novel Daughter of the Deep The book is set in the world of 20 000 Leagues but six generations after the events described in Jules Verne s book Other Verne submarines editSubmarines feature in some other of Verne s works In the 1896 novel Facing the Flag the pirate Ker Karraje uses an unnamed submarine that acts both as a tug to his schooner Ebba and for ramming and destroying ships which are the targets of his piracy The same book also features HMS Sword a small Royal Navy experimental submarine which is sunk after a valiant but unequal struggle with the pirate submarine In the book The Master of the World Robur s secondary vehicle Terror is a strange flying machine with submarine automobile and speedboat capabilities It briefly eludes naval forces on the Great Lakes by diving Images edit nbsp Captain Nemo and Professor Aronnax discussing the plans of Nautilus nbsp The Grand Salon of Nautilus nbsp Captain Nemo s room aboard Nautilus nbsp The library of Nautilus nbsp Engine room of Nautilus nbsp Main window of Nautilus nbsp The silhouette of Nautilus in the distanceSee also editList of fictional ships List of underwater science fiction worksNotes edit Skrabec Quentin R 2005 The Metallurgic Age The Victorian Flowering of Invention and Industrial Science revised ed Jefferson NC McFarland p 44 ISBN 9781476611136 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Notice at the Musee de la Marine Rochefort Verne Jules The Mysterious Island Translated by Frederick Paul Walter via Wikisource a b c d Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Translated by Frederick Paul Walter via Wikisource a b c d Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Translated by Frederick Paul Walter ISBN 978 1 4384 3238 0 via Wikisource a b Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Translated by Frederick Paul Walter ISBN 978 1 4384 3238 0 via Wikisource a b Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Translated by Frederick Paul Walter ISBN 978 1 4384 3238 0 via Wikisource William Butcher Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas Jules Verne Google Books Explanatory Notes Page 422 ISBN 0 19 282839 8 Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas Jules Verne Google Books Explanatory Notes Page 422 ISBN 0 19 282839 8 a b Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Walter Retrieved 23 October 2022 via Wikisource a b Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead Part 31 Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea Part One PDF Archived PDF from the original on 10 August 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2022 Wolf of the Deep Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama Stephen Fox p50 ISBN 978 1 4000 9542 1 a b Verne Jules 20 000 Leagues Under the Seas Walter Retrieved 23 October 2022 via Wikisource Semmes Raphael 16 March 1869 Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States Kelly Piet amp Company via Google Books USS Kearsarge sinks CSS Alabama www history com Retrieved 23 October 2022 Miles to Nautical Leagues conversion www metric conversions org Retrieved 23 October 2022 Derdzinski Mark January 2007 Verne s 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea The Explicator 65 2 91 94 doi 10 3200 EXPL 65 2 91 94 S2CID 162309689 The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States by Raphael Semmes www gutenberg org Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States by Raphael Semmes www gutenberg org Retrieved 23 October 2022 Jules Verne Just another WordPress site Jules Verne Retrieved 23 October 2022 alter ego Collins English Dictionary Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b John Lamb Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead Part 25 PDF a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne www gutenberg org Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne www gutenberg org Ch XVI P178 Line 10 Fox Stephen Wolf of the Deep Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama p93 Vintage Books 2007 ISBN 978 1 4000 9542 1 a b The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States by Raphael Semmes www gutenberg org XLIII p604 line 14 Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne www gutenberg org Retrieved 23 October 2022 The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne www gutenberg org Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b c d The Project Gutenberg eBook of Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne www gutenberg org Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea William Butcher translation 1998 ISBN 0 19 282839 8 p408 William Butcher translation Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea 1998 ISBN 0 19 282839 8 Ch 14 P91 line 3 Sidney Kravitz translation The Mysterious Island p590 ISBN 978 0 8195 6559 4 Jules Verne and the Heroes of Birkenhead PDF Archived PDF from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2022 External links edit nbsp Media related to Nautilus Jules Verne at Wikimedia Commons Jules Verne s text in 20 000 Leagues under the Seas provides a great deal of information about Nautilus as discussed on this page Jules Verne s Nautilus Many artists and ordinary folk have envisioned over the decades their own interpretations of Nautilus A Catalog of Nautilus Designs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nautilus fictional submarine amp oldid 1221090166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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