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Model, of Phoenician ship

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made in Glasgow

Model, of Phoenician ship
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This wooden model represents a Phoenician ship from around 700 BC. It is based on an ancient Assyrian relief from Nineveh of a two-decked Phoenician fighting vessel belonging to the King of Tyre and Sidon. The model was built to a scale of approximately 1:50 by Mr R W Clark of Glasgow.

Features shown on the model include a fighting top used by archers and a rope ladder leading to the top of the main mast. The ship would have been propelled by 52 oarsmen arranged in 13 pairs on either side of the lower deck. The principal weapon would have been the ram - a device adopted from the Egyptians.

The Phoenicians were the first masters of naval engineering and probably the greatest of all ancient sailors, though few records remain of their ships. The little we know comes from bas-reliefs, vases, cylinder seals and coins. Their merchant ships were broad-beamed and used sail to leave room for cargo. Their fighting vessels were powered by oars as well as a sail, and controlled by a steering oar.

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