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longship |
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longshipViking warship, probably developed in the 8th century. Longships were manoeuvrable and fast, well designed for raiding coastal settlements. They could carry 60 or more warriors and travelled under sail or by rowing. There were up to 30 rowing benches in standard longships (the ‘great ships’ of the late Viking Age had even more). The length-to-breadth ratio of the longship is greater than 6:1 (11.4:1 in one case) enabling them to cut swiftly through the water. Speed was further enhanced by lightness; the timbers of the shell were planed to a width of only 2 cm/0.8 in. In 1997 Danish archaeologists discovered a longship dating from AD 1025, in the mud of Roskilde harbour. At 35 m/115 ft, it is the longest discovered so far. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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The text is spare and poetic ("there's the bay, with long boats on top, and the round moon rising above"), and Cooper's loose sketches, economic as his text, still convey much, so that repeat readings reveal previously missed details. Billie visited the site in August, noting the lake's original name was Pithlachocco - a Seminole word for "place of long boats. |
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