Not Even Past." William Faulkner NOT EVEN PAST
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The Age of Exploration
ABSS8_ch05.qxd 2/9/07 10:54 AM Page 104 The Age of 5 Exploration FIGURE 5-1 1 This painting of Christopher Columbus arriving in the Americas was done by Louis Prang and Company in 1893. What do you think Columbus might be doing in this painting? 104 Unit 1 Renaissance Europe ABSS8_ch05.qxd 2/9/07 10:54 AM Page 105 WORLDVIEW INQUIRY Geography What factors might motivate a society to venture into unknown regions Knowledge Time beyond its borders? Worldview Economy Beliefs 1492. On a beach on an island in the Caribbean Sea, two Values Society Taino girls were walking in the cool shade of the palm trees eating roasted sweet potatoes. uddenly one of the girls pointed out toward the In This Chapter ocean. The girls could hardly believe their eyes. S Imagine setting out across an Three large strange boats with huge sails were ocean that may or may not con- headed toward the shore. They could hear the tain sea monsters without a map shouts of the people on the boats in the distance. to guide you. Imagine sailing on The girls ran back toward their village to tell the ocean for 96 days with no everyone what they had seen. By the time they idea when you might see land returned to the beach with a crowd of curious again. Imagine being in charge of villagers, the people from the boats had already a group of people who you know landed. They had white skin, furry faces, and were are planning to murder you. -
European Ships of Discovery
European Ships of Discovery Filipe Castro Texas A&M University [email protected] Abstract The ships and boats of the 15th and early 16th century European voyages were the space shuttles of their time, and yet we don’t know much about them because most have been destroyed by looters and treasure hunters. This paper will focus on a particular type, the caravel, and presents an overview of the early European watercraft that crossed the Atlantic and sailed along the American coasts during the first decades of the 16th century. Key words: caravel, 16th Century, Europe, ships, looting Introduction The earliest Iberian voyages into the Atlantic were carried out in the existing ships. Soon however the need to adapt the existing watercraft to the sailing conditions of the open sea triggered a process of evolution that is poorly understood, but that reflects the existing cultural, scientific and economic conditions in the Iberian kingdoms. This is an interesting process of technological evolution that is in its earliest states of investigation. The main ships of the European expansion were sailing ships, mainly caravels, naus, and galleons. Rowing ships were also used in the European factories abroad, sometimes shipped in the holds of sailing ships, and sometimes built in Africa and Asia, in the beginning according to European standards, but very soon incorporating local features as they were understood as advantageous. This paper deals with caravels, a versatile and small ship type that is still poorly understood. Caravels Caravels are among the least understood of all historical vessels. Mentioned in hundreds, perhaps thousands of books, these ships are associated with the Iberian exploration of the Atlantic in the 15th century, and are considered the space shuttles of their time, allowing the Portuguese and Spanish explorers to sail down the African coast, and open the maritime routes to the Caribbean, the west coast of Africa, and the Indian and Pacific Oceans. -
Ka Hue Anahā Journal of Academic & Research Writing Spring 2014
Ka Hue Anahā Journal of Academic & Research Writing Spring 2014 Kapi‘olani Community College Board of Student Publications 4303 Diamond Head Road Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96816 Ka Hue Anahā Journal of Academic & Research Writing Spring 2014 Board of Student Publications 4303 Diamond Head Road Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96816 About Ka Hue Anahā Ka Hue Anahā publishes academic and research writing in all disciplines and programs and from all courses, except for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math research reports, which are published in a separate journal. The name, given by LLL Department Chair and Hawaiian language instructor Nawa’a Napoleon, translates as “The calabash of light” or “The wellspring of reflected light,” and is meant to reflect the diversity of opinions and spectrum of culture our island state fosters. Ka hue – gourd, water calabash, any narrow-necked vessel for holding water. A way of connecting net sections by, interlocking meshes. Anahā – reflection of light Faculty Coordinator: Davin Kubota. Faculty Reading Committee: David Uedoi, Dawn Oshiro, Davin Kubota. Publisher: Board of Student Publication, Kapi‘olani Community College. © Kapi‘olani Community College. Students retain all publication rights to their work. Cover: Kapulani Landgraf Table of Contents KAYO ESTES / A Story in Chinatown 5 MARC BASANES / Apple (INC.)’s Logo: The Face & Downfall of the Millennial Generation 7 QUINN DALUZ / The Impact of Heteronormativity on the Transgender Community 13 ASHLEY M. SUZUKI / Role of Social and Economic Factors in Early Childhood Development: -
MEDIEVAL SEAMANSHIP UNDER SAIL by TULLIO VIDONI B. A., The
MEDIEVAL SEAMANSHIP UNDER SAIL by TULLIO VIDONI B. A., The University of British Columbia, 1986. A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES (Department of History) We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standards THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA September 19 8 7 <§)Tullio Vidoni U 6 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the head of my department or by his or her representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of The University of British Columbia 1956 Main Mall Vancouver, Canada V6T 1Y3 DE-6(3/81) ii ABSTRACT Voyages of discovery could not be entertained until the advent of three-masted ships. Single-sailed ships were effective for voyages of short duration, undertaken with favourable winds. Ships with two masts could make long coastal voyages in the summer. Both these types had more or less severe limitations to sailing to windward. To sail any ship successfully in this mode it is necessary to be able to balance the sail plan accurately. This method of keeping course could not reach its full developemnt until more than two sails were available for manipulation. -
Columbus Stamp Checklist
CHECKLIST OF WORLDWIDE “COLUMBUS” STAMPS Christopher Columbus and the Discovery of America ...plus other explorers and people of interest regarding the New World in philately ...by David Nye Note: Scott numbers are used which are trademarks of Amos Press, Inc. dba Scott Publishing Co., Sidney, OH. U.S.A. AITUTAKI #479-81 (11 Dec 1992) Columbus blessed at Palos, map, landing. ALBANIA #2395-97 (10 Jan 1992) Explorers: Bering, Columbus, Magellan. #2421-22 (20 Aug 1992) Europa, Map of N. & S. America, Columbus, Columbus & ships, Columbus meeting natives. #2421-22 + label (20 Aug 1992) Each stamp with label from center of sheets. Map & Columbus, Columbus & ships, Columbus meeting natives. #2423 (20 Aug 1992) S/S, Europa, map, Christopher Columbus. ANDORRA (Spanish Administration) #217-18 (08 May 1992) Europa, Santa María, King Ferdinand. ANDORRA (French Administration) #414-15 (25 Apr 1992) Europa, Columbus’ fleet, Landing in New World. ANGOLA #542-45 (22 Apr 1968) Hope, Castle, Convent, Cabral’s Armada. #850 (18 Sep 1992) Genoa ’92, Discovery of America, Landing of Columbus. 1 ANGUILLA #174-78 (10 Sep 1973) Discovery of West Indies: Santa María, Old West Indies map, map of voyages, sighting land, Columbus landing. Strip of 4 + single. #178a (10 Sep 1973) S/S, Discovery of West Indies with #174-78 Santa María, Old West Indies map, map of voyages, sighting land, Columbus landing. #349-54 (23 Apr 1979) Stamp on Stamp set including U.S. #245. #354a (23 Apr 1979) S/S of 6 stamps on stamps (#349-54) including U.S. #245. #701-05 (22 Dec 1986) C. -
NOTES XVII 2012.Pdf
SCOTTISH WOODLAND HISTORY CONFERENCE NOTES XVII Woods, Trade and Boats SEVENTEENTH MEETING THURSDAY 25th OCTOBER 2012 A K BELL LIBRARY, PERTH NWDG Scottish Woodland History Conference: Notes XVII (2012) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Native Woodlands Discussion Group is indebted to the undernoted for their sponsorship and help in making the 17th meeting of the Scottish Woodland History Conference a success: In 2012, the NWDG Scottish Woodland History Conference (formerly the Scottish Woodland History Discussion Group Conference) was organised by Mairi Stewart, Chris Smout, Coralie Mills & Jonathan Wordsworth with the administrative support of Alison Averis. We are grateful to all those who helped to make the conference a success including our sponsors, chairpersons, speakers, helpers and delegates. Front cover illustration: Norse use of the Scots pine by Mike Taylor, Tain (from Crawford 1995) i NWDG Scottish Woodland History Conference: Notes XVII (2012) Woods, Trade and Boats Edited by Coralie M Mills © Native Woodlands Discussion Group 2013 © The papers, their individual authors 2013, including images unless otherwise stated ISSN 2049-8985 (Earlier years’ Notes under ISSN 1470-0271) CONTENTS The seventeenth annual conference (now known as the ‘NWDG Scottish Woodland History Conference’, formerly known as the ‘Scottish Woodland History Discussion Group Conference’) was held at Perth on Thursday 25th October 2012. The Contents reflect the scope of the day, as summarised in the Introduction, followed by papers for each of the presentations. Page -
Medieval Shipping
Medieval Shipping A Wikipedia Compilation by Michael A. Linton Contents 1 Caravel 1 1.1 History ................................................. 1 1.2 Design ................................................ 1 1.3 See also ................................................ 2 1.4 References ............................................... 2 1.5 External links ............................................. 2 2 Carrack 6 2.1 Origins ................................................ 8 2.2 Carracks in Asia ........................................... 10 2.3 Famous carracks ............................................ 10 2.4 See also ................................................ 12 2.5 References ............................................... 12 2.6 Further reading ............................................ 12 2.7 External links ............................................. 12 3 Cog (ship) 13 3.1 Design ................................................. 14 3.2 History ................................................. 14 3.3 Gallery ................................................. 15 3.4 See also ................................................ 15 3.5 References ............................................... 15 3.5.1 Footnotes ........................................... 15 3.5.2 Bibliography ......................................... 15 3.6 External links ............................................. 15 4 Fire ship 16 4.1 History ................................................. 16 4.1.1 Ancient era, first uses .................................... -
The History and Development of Caravels
THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CARAVELS A Thesis by GEORGE ROBERT SCHWARZ Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 2008 Major Subject: Anthropology THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CARAVELS A Thesis by GEORGE ROBERT SCHWARZ Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS Approved by: Chair of Committee, Luis Filipe Vieira de Castro Committee Members, Donny L. Hamilton James M. Rosenheim Head of Department, Donny L. Hamilton May 2008 Major Subject: Anthropology iii ABSTRACT The History and Development of Caravels. (May 2008) George Robert Schwarz, B.A., University of Cincinnati Chair of Advisory Committee: Dr. Luis Filipe Vieira de Castro An array of ship types was used during the European Age of Expansion (early 15th to early 17th centuries), but one vessel in particular emerges from the historical records as a harbinger of discovery: the caravel. The problem is that little is known about these popular ships of discovery, despite the fair amount of historical evidence that has been uncovered. How big were they? How many men did it take to operate such a vessel? What kind of sailing characteristics did they have? How and by whom were they designed? Where did they originate and how did they develop? These questions cannot be answered by looking at the historical accounts alone. For this reason, scholars must take another approach for learning about caravels by examining additional sources, namely ancient shipbuilding treatises, archaeological evidence, surviving archaic shipbuilding techniques, and iconographic representations from the past. -
AND SQUARE-RIGGED SHIPS (PART 1) Look at Mediterranean Lateen- and Square-Rigged Ships (Part 1)
The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (2008) 37.2: 347–359 doi: 10.1111/j.1095-9270.2008.00183.x ABlackwellF.NAUTICAL CASTRO Publishing ET ARCHAEOLOGY, AL.: LtdMEDITERRANEANQuantitative 37.2 LATEEN- AND SQUARE-RIGGED SHIPS (PART 1) Look at Mediterranean Lateen- and Square-Rigged Ships (Part 1) F. Castro Nautical Archaeology Program, Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843– 4352, USA N. Fonseca and T. Vacas Unit of Marine Technology and Engineering, Technical University of Lisbon, Instituto Superior Técnico, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1049–001 Lisboa, Portugal F. Ciciliot Società Savonese di Storia Patria, via Guidobono 38/3, 17100 Savona, Italy Modern-day engineering can be a useful tool to help understand the technological changes which led to the development of the three-masted ships of the modern age of sail, in the beginning of the 15th century. Recent finding and excavation of an increasing number of medieval shipwrecks offers the opportunity, and the authors propose to build a database with technical characteristics of late-medieval vessels in the hope of finding patterns that will help understand the relatively-quick techno- logical evolution of Mediterranean merchant craft of the 14th and 15th centuries. © 2008 The Authors Key words: Lateen rigging, square rigging, Mediterranean seafaring, sailing performance, technological change. t is difficult to explain technological change lateen sails in the Mediterranean during the first in shipbuilding history. Any particular ship- half of the 6th century, at least in some types of I design is the result of a number of human craft? What were the main advantages of this new and natural factors. -
Getting from Here to There and Back – the Impact of a Few Transportation Innovations on History
Getting from here to there and back – The impact of a few transportation innovations on history Class 2 William A. Reader E-mail: [email protected] 1 What We Will Cover Today • Finish up on horses • The impact of the camel • The Impact of the sailing ship – The full-rigged ship – Cannon • The impact of the steam-powered vessel – Steamboat – Steamship – Refrigerated steam-powered vessel Firearms and the Horse • The invention of firearms made the knight obsolete since bullets could penetrate the knight’s armor • Despite the coming of firearms, warrior elites on horseback with their stress on individual hand-to- hand combat resisted acceptance of the longbow and gun since it threatened their elite status – Thus cavalry charges persisted into the wars of the 19th century and even into World War I Firearms and the Horse - 2 • Despite elite warrior resistance, the horse cavalry’s role by the 19th century became that of: – scouting, – screening of infantry movements, – raiding enemy supply lines, – transport of supplies and soldiers to the battlefield, – transport of artillery pieces, and f – foraging • Battles of cavalry units, such as the Civil War battle of Brandy Station, were between men on horseback armed with rifles and pistols. Firearms and the Horse - 3 • Paradoxically, the large conscript armies of the 20th century required large numbers of horses simply to meet the massive logistical demands for supplies and ammunition. – In World War I, every army depended on horses to move supplies from railheads to the front – In World War II, the German and the Russian armies both relied on horses for their logistics Firearms and the Horse - 4 • In the 21st century, the horse still has had a role in war – In the Sudan, the Arab Janjaweed fighters use horses in their wars in Darfur, western Sudan, and Eastern Chad – In Afghanistan, U.S. -
Introductions to Heritage Assets: Ships and Boats: Prehistory to 1840
Ships and Boats: Prehistory to 1840 Introductions to Heritage Assets Summary Historic England’s Introductions to Heritage Assets (IHAs) are accessible, authoritative, illustrated summaries of what we know about specific types of archaeological site, building, landscape or marine asset. Typically they deal with subjects which lack such a summary. This can either be where the literature is dauntingly voluminous, or alternatively where little has been written. Most often it is the latter, and many IHAs bring understanding of site or building types which are neglected or little understood. Many of these are what might be thought of as ‘new heritage’, that is they date from after the Second World War. Principally from the archaeological evidence, this overview identifies and describes pre-Industrial vessels (that is from the earliest times to about 1840) used on inland and coastal waters and the open sea, as well as ones abandoned in coastal areas. It includes vessels buried through reclamation or some other process: many of the most significant early boats and ships have been discovered on land rather than at sea. Vessels and wrecks pre-dating 1840 are relatively rare: the latter comprise just 4 per cent of known sites around the English coast. This guidance note has been written by Mark Dunkley and edited by Paul Stamper. It is one is of several guidance documents that can be accessed at HistoricEngland.org.uk/listing/selection-criteria/listing-selection/ihas-buildings/ First published by English Heritage March 2012. This edition published by Historic England July 2016. All images © Historic England unless otherwise stated. -
Making the First Global Trade Route: the Southeast Asian Foundations
MAKING THE FIRST GLOBAL TRADE ROUTE: THE SOUTHEAST ASIAN FOUNDATIONS OF THE ACAPULCO-MANILA GALLEON TRADE, 1519 - 1650 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAIʻI AT MĀNOA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HISTORY AUGUST 2014 By Andrew Christian Peterson Dissertation Committee: Matthew Romaniello, Chairperson Fabio López-Lázaro Vina Lanzona Kieko Matteson Cynthia Franklin Keywords: Manila Galleon, Philippines, Pacific Ocean, Indios, Spanish Empire ©Andrew Christian Peterson, 2014 i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and foremost, thanks are due to those I have worked with at the University of Hawaii, including professors Matthew Romaniello, Kieko Matteson, Vina Lanzona, Fabio López-Lázaro, Cynthia Franklin, Leonard Andaya, and the late Jerry Bentley. Jerry Bentley and his world history program were what lured me to study at UH and my years working under him, while few, were tremendously rewarding. The World History program at Hawaii proved to be a dynamic intellectual community that aided me in more ways that can be counted. My interest in the Acapulco-Manila galleon trade began back in 2007 at San Diego State University while working under David Christian and Paula De Vos, both of whom helped me set the groundwork for this study as an MA thesis. Researching this project would not have been possible without the resources made available to me by the staff of the Ayer Collection at the Newberry Library in Chicago, Illinois. Thanks are also due to the staff members of the Pacific Collection at the University of Hawaii’s Hamilton Library, the Hatcher Graduate Library at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and the Latin American Collection at the University of Florida.