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- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!ncr-sd!ncrcae!ncrhub2!ciss!law7!military
- From: Frank Kastenholz <samsung!ulowell!vax.ftp.com!kasten@uunet.uu.net>
- Subject: Re: triremes
- Message-ID: <C19o3w.3v4@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: FTP Software, Inc., North Andover, Massachusetts
- References: <C15y9w.K6L@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 17:47:56 GMT
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
- Lines: 37
-
-
- From Frank Kastenholz <samsung!ulowell!vax.ftp.com!kasten@uunet.uu.net>
-
- In article <C15y9w.K6L@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> mathers@sibelius.trl.OZ.AU (Steven Mathers) writes:
-
- > Does anyone know if ancient warships (triremes and the like approx
- > 300bc-300ad) sailed the open sea, or just crept along the coastline?
- >
- > I know merchant ships of this period had the capability of sailing
- > from Rome to Alexandria in favorable winds, but I would have thought
- > that this kind of trip would be impossible or unbelieveably
- > foolhardy for a fleet of triremes.
- >
- > Another fact I have in the puzzle is that Rome lost 2 seperate fleets
- > during the Punic wars just sailing from Siciliy to Carthage, so I would
- > guess this would be about the longest open sea voyage that ancient
- > naval commanders would attempt. But Im guessing.
- >
- > Thanks for any help.
-
- Most sea voyages at the time were limited to crossing open water at
- restricted points or hugging the coastline/island hopping. The main
- problem was navigation. Navigation for crossing open water consisted
- primarily of pointing the bow in the direction that the Sun comes up
- in the morning, or whatever, and praying to Neptune that you don't go
- so far off course that you do not recognize the land that you reach.
- When hugging the coast you could navigate by various landmarks
- (hills, towns, etc).
-
- If my memory serves, "Mapmakers" (a history of mapmaking) talks a bit
- about this in the context of what ancient maps had on them, what they
- were used for, etc, etc, etc.
-
- --
- Frank Kastenholz
-
-
-