Full rigged ship
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A full rigged ship or fully rigged ship is a square rigged sailing vessel with three or more masts, all of them square rigged. A full rigged ship is said to have a ship rig.
Sometimes such a vessel will merely be called a ship, particularly in 18th - early 19th Century and earlier usage, to distinguish it from other vessels such as schooners, barques, barquentines, brigs etc.
A vessel with ship rig is sometimes referred to as a ship, without regard to whether it fulfills other definitions of that word. On the other hand, a full rigged ship may be referred to by its function, as in collier or frigate, rather than being called a ship.
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[edit] Masts
The masts of a full rigged ship, from bow to stern, are:
- Foremast, the second tallest.
- Mainmast, the tallest.
- Mizzenmast, the third tallest.
- Jiggermast, which may not be present but will be fourth tallest if so.
There is no recognised name for a fifth mast on a ship-rigged vessel (though this may be called the spanker mast on a barque, schooner or barquentine) and indeed only one 5-masted full rigged ship (the Flying P-Liner Preussen) was ever built before the launch in recent years of a few modern cruise sailing ships; even the fourth is relatively rare for full rigged ships. Ships with five and more masts are not normally fully rigged and their masts may be numbered rather than named in extreme cases.
If the masts are of wood, each mast is in three or more pieces. The lowest piece is the mast itself, or may be called the lower. Above it, the pieces in order are:
- Topmast.
- Topgallant mast.
- Royal mast, if fitted.
On steel-masted vessels, the corresponding sections of the mast are named after the traditional wooden sections.
[edit] Sails on a mast
The lowest and normally largest sail on a mast is the course sail of that mast, and is referred to simply by the mast name: Foresail, mainsail, mizzen sail, jigger sail.
Above the course sail, in order, are:
- Topsail, or
- Lower topsail, if fitted.
- Upper topsail, if fitted.
- Topgallant sail, or
- Lower topgallant sail, if fitted.
- Upper topgallant sail, if fitted.
- Royal sail, if fitted.
- Skysail, if fitted.
The division of a sail into upper and lower sails, was a matter of practicality with regard to paying a crew big enough to handle the undivided sail of a big ship. In extreme cases, such an undivided sail in a big, late-nineteenth or twentieth century vessel would have been impossible to handle.
There is some variation possible here, for example some ships have only one sail set on the topmast, in which case it is simply called the (fore, main, mizzen or jigger) topsail and even more often on the topgallant mast, in which case it is simply called the (fore, main, mizzen or jigger) topgallant. If all seven sails are present on the foremast, the fourth sail from the deck on the foremast would (just as an example) be called the fore lower topgallant sail.
Jibs are carried from the foremast, and have varying naming conventions.
Staysails may be carried between any other mast and the one in front of it or from the foremast to the bowsprit. They are named after the mast from which the are hoisted, so for example a staysail hoisted to the top of the mizzen topgallant on a stay running to the top of the main topmast would be called the mizzen topgallant staysail.
In light winds studding sails, pronounced "stunsls" may be carried on either side of any or all of the square rigged sails except royals and skysails. They are named after the adjacent sail and the side of the vessel on which they are set, for example main topgallant starboard stu'nsail.
One or two spankers are carried aft of the aftmost mast, if two they are called the upper spanker and lower spanker. A fore-and-aft topsail may be carried above the upper or only spanker, and is called the gaff sail.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Development of the Full-Rigged Ship From the Carrack to the Full-Rigger
- Example of full rigged ship: Stad Amsterdam
Types of sailing vessels and rigs | |
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Barque | Barquentine | Bermuda rig | Bilander | Brig | Brigantine | Caravel | Carrack | Catamaran | Catboat | Clipper | Dutch Clipper | Cog | Corvette | Cutter | Dhow | Fifie | Fluyt | Fore & Aft Rig | Frigate | Full Rigged Ship | Gaff Rig | Galleon | Gunter Rig | Hermaphrodite Brig | Junk | Ketch | Longship | Mersey Flat | Multihull | Nao | Norfolk Wherry | Pink | Pocket Cruiser | Polacca | Pram | Proa | Sailing hydrofoil | Schooner | Ship of the Line | Sloop | Smack | Snow | Square Rig | Tall Ship | Thames Sailing Barge | Trimaran | Wherry | Windjammer | Windsurfer | Xebec | Yacht | Yawl |
Sails, Spars and Rigging | |
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Sails | |
Course | Driver | Extra | Genoa | Gennaker | Jib | Lateen | Mainsail | Moonsail | Royal | Spanker | Spinnaker | Spritsail | Staysail | Studding | Tallboy | Topgallant | Topsail | Trysail | |
Sail anatomy and materials | |
Clew | Foot | Head | Leech | Luff | Roach | Tack Dacron | Kevlar | |
Spars | |
Boom | Bowsprit | Fore-mast | Gaff | Jackstaff | Jigger-mast | Jury Rig | Main-mast | Mast | Mizzen-mast | Masthead Truck | Spinnaker Pole | Yard | |
Rigging components | |
Backstay | Block | Boom vang | Braces | Buntlines | Cleat | Clevis Pin | Clewlines | Cunningham | Downhaul | Forestay | Gasket | Gooseneck | Guy | Halyard | Outhaul | Parrell beads | Peak | Preventer | Ratlines | Rigging (Running) | Shackle | Rigging (Standing) | Sheet | Shroud | Stay mouse | Stays | Throat | Topping lift | Trapeze |