15 ADVANCED Ancient Ships

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  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
  • Before the invention of aircraft in the 20th century, the only way to travel vast distances around the world was by boat. And throughout history, the design of ships has continually improved. From advanced war boats, to sophisticated treasure carriers, it’s time to take a look at the 15 most advanced ancient ships.
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Комментарии • 825

  • @rodneydavenport4646
    @rodneydavenport4646 2 года назад +455

    Do you people understand what the word ‘ancient’ means? Look it up!

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 2 года назад +54

      Thanks! I was already wondering if my 52 years old, used, English car from Coventry should be called ancient, too *. . . ;-)*

    • @bretthess6376
      @bretthess6376 2 года назад +38

      Bit of a joke, really. Half the ships on this list are not "ancient". About five are modern, i.e., within the last 200 years or so. Sloppy scholarship all round.

    • @user-qy9vz8il3q
      @user-qy9vz8il3q 2 года назад +15

      Depends on what archeology considers as ancient. For example in Greece law considers as ancient whatever is made before 1830

    • @Blacklightprince
      @Blacklightprince Год назад +12

      Yes but evidence suggests that the ancient people were probably more advanced than we thought. ;)

    • @jamespostle6894
      @jamespostle6894 Год назад +13

      It's a video make by a content farm nothing is gonna be accurate.

  • @filhodarosa7512
    @filhodarosa7512 2 года назад +164

    The Portuguese Caravela was a revolutionary type of ship that carried the first Portuguese explorers in multiple voyages along the African coast and which eventually carried them to India and South America. It was a small ship that could sail almost directly into the wind, with triangular sails and which could hug the coast and even travel upriver, in the deeper estuaries. It was the ship that ushered in the European expansion to the outside world. Columbus’ fleet to the New World contained a number of Caravels. Columbus had lived for 30 years in Portugal, was married to a Portuguese noble woman and certainly knew of the capabilities of this type of ship.

    • @ricardosilvaesousa2838
      @ricardosilvaesousa2838 2 года назад +14

      It's a big miss on this list, so are the Naus from the India's trade routes after we discovered the way to get there. It's said that those were massive boats.

    • @svenskaskeppsbyggmodeller7629
      @svenskaskeppsbyggmodeller7629 2 года назад

      Very nice video! Thank you for learning about the ship! :)
      If you want to learn about the swedish ship Vasa, see here: ruclips.net/video/T00ADEVY4xo/видео.html&ab_channel=Historiepodden

    • @redreuben5260
      @redreuben5260 2 года назад +2

      Explain to me “sail almost directly into the wind” ?

    • @JoaoMariaNunes
      @JoaoMariaNunes Год назад +2

      @@redreuben5260 learn the difference between rectangular sails and triangular sails..."Tacking is a sailing maneuver by which a sailing vessel, whose desired course is into the wind, turns its bow toward and through the wind so that the direction from which the wind blows changes from one side of the boat to the other, allowing progress in the desired direction."

    • @redreuben5260
      @redreuben5260 Год назад +2

      @@JoaoMariaNunes I know how to sail, I have been racing on and off for 30 years.
      What I was asking for was an explanation of how a mediaeval boat can “sail almost directly into the wind”
      Clearly it’s a massive exaggeration.

  • @Kraniumbrud
    @Kraniumbrud Год назад +138

    I think it is important to point out that longships could easily sail onto shore and depart again, and does very well on shallow waters like rivers, it is also light enough that it could be carried by its crew

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance Год назад +9

      It´s the minecraft rowboat just bigger

    • @darviniusb
      @darviniusb Год назад +7

      I would not call it a ship, is a boat after all and should not be in this list.

    • @user-wm6xv3er8x
      @user-wm6xv3er8x Год назад +1

      Никогда 30-40-60 викингов не смогли бы нести свой корабль.Не пишите бред.Драккар весил 6000-8000--- 10000 кг.А 50 человек могут нести не более 1500 кг.)))

  • @Neneset
    @Neneset Год назад +17

    Flying Cloud set her 89 day 4 hour record while carrying cargo. She was a working ship. Her record was beaten by a (relatively) modern racing yacht that had no purpose but speed.

  • @henrilopes7337
    @henrilopes7337 2 года назад +102

    The São João Baptista (English: Saint John the Baptist), commonly known as the Botafogo, was a Portuguese galleon warship built in the 16th century, around 1534, considered the biggest and most powerful warship in the world at the time.
    This ship could carry 366 bronze cannons, and had an artillery power of 1,000 tons. For this reason, it became known as Botafogo, meaning literally fire maker or spitfire in popular Portuguese.

    • @mannipula
      @mannipula 2 года назад +30

      No one speak of the portuguese ships, because the world just know about americans, inglish, and other people that doesn´t exist no more, but remember their ships...lol
      The portuguese the first and global ultramarine empire, made the evolution of the sail and various nautical instruments, the first back charged cannons are made by the portuguese.
      The world at that time, seek the nautical cartography made by the portuguese.
      Portugal reinvented the maritime artilhery, they arm any ship with massive cannons in few numbers, gived hem eficiency.
      The first pre charged cannons are made by the portuguese.

    • @trythinking6676
      @trythinking6676 2 года назад +16

      @@mannipula this American knows the nautical debt we owe our brothers in Portugal. Not many do.

    • @sakana69
      @sakana69 2 года назад +10

      No mention to "botafogo" is unreal.

    • @angelabanze504
      @angelabanze504 2 года назад +1

      São analfabetos funcionais, ignorantes culturais... Mas infelizmente o mundo é de quem têm poder e não razão.

    • @p.martinsluiz3923
      @p.martinsluiz3923 2 года назад +8

      Esperava que um canal de lingua inglêsa falasse das caravelas , ou do Botafogo ?

  • @knight838_
    @knight838_ Год назад +10

    the USS Constitution is still an active ship in the US Navy. while she has a niche role she has not been taken out of service.

  • @marcbiele8020
    @marcbiele8020 2 года назад +13

    The advantage of sailing-ships was that they could adept at every wind-strength when de-loaded. The modern ships need the turn-over-effect to equilibre that. - A question of calculation!

  • @Bald_Zeus
    @Bald_Zeus Год назад +39

    You should've included the "Vasa" :) Even though it literally sank during its maiden voyage it was a beast of a ship and you can see it with your own eyes in the Vasa museum

    • @rudiruttger
      @rudiruttger Год назад +8

      Mankind's oldest and fanciest submarine.

    • @Sinister_fartbox
      @Sinister_fartbox Год назад

      @@rudiruttger I think it isn’t the first ship sink though

    • @rudiruttger
      @rudiruttger Год назад +7

      @@Sinister_fartbox What? sink? It departed on its maiden voyage, and successfully made for the depths soon after its launch! It submerged! It didn't sink, it's a submarine!

    • @Bald_Zeus
      @Bald_Zeus Год назад +6

      @@rudiruttger Might be battling the Moskva right now

    • @bjorreb7487
      @bjorreb7487 Год назад +2

      Also the swedish ship Kalmar Nyckel build in Holland that sailed between Sweden and USA and the swedish built ship Goteborg that maid many trips to China. A replica of Kalmar Nyckel was built in USA and is used as a school ship and a replica of Goteborg is right now on its way to visit China again.

  • @gardiner516
    @gardiner516 Год назад +10

    hms St Lawrence was built at Kingston Ontario Canada on Lake Ontario in 1812 during the war between the USA and UK. She very similar in size and guns as HMS Victory with three gun decks . She eventually was abandoned near she was built. One of her 32 pounder guns can be found to this day in North York grave yard in Toronto Ontario.

  • @bearedwarf7013
    @bearedwarf7013 Год назад +1

    Seeing old stuff they build back in the day an how well some of it held up over the time is mind blowing

  • @ltmcolen
    @ltmcolen Год назад +24

    Navy Engineer here. It seems unlikely the Siracusia was able to carry 1800 Tons and 2000 people.
    The HMS victory has the same dimensions and the displacement is around 2200 Tons.
    If it would be up to standard in technology it could carry about 1800 Tons safely, but where would the people go?
    Assuming the deck is completely clear of objects it would be 770 square meters.
    If all a board would be on the main deck there would be around 0.3 square meters per person...

    • @user-md4pw9yr8f
      @user-md4pw9yr8f 10 месяцев назад +1

      62 chinese 440 by 180 feet (lol 1) wooden ships (lol 2) at the beginning of 15 st. (lol 3) - is OK! Siracusia ("...details are not known...suggested....") - is fail! Great job navy engineer!

  • @damoryan3873
    @damoryan3873 2 года назад +3

    Wow some amazing ships and the history behind them is amazing

  • @aedancroy4219
    @aedancroy4219 Год назад +4

    The Trireme is honestly one of the coolest type of ship imo.

  • @azorean88
    @azorean88 2 года назад +21

    The Portuguese galleon "BotaFogo" was the largest and most powerfull ship in the 16 century. 366 ( cannons ) wich was impressive at the time... and yet you do not mention it in this video! SHAME ON YOU!!!

  • @proudamerican183
    @proudamerican183 Год назад +11

    "Antique" is a better word to describe these magnificent ships.

  • @quinnfischer9624
    @quinnfischer9624 Год назад +3

    i expected a crapy video but im impressed, this is informative and entertaining. thank you

  • @jayjay-bz3rr
    @jayjay-bz3rr 2 года назад +3

    Beautiful magnificent ships

  • @brutus4013
    @brutus4013 2 года назад +12

    Good video but according to the definition of ancient , you need to be at least 1500 years old . That eliminates about half of your vessels. In my opinion.

  • @thereddye
    @thereddye Год назад +3

    These are definitely 15 ships of all time, they were built by the most and entirely existent craftsmen of their time, they were introduced in and were used in their time and they were all more advanced than a raft.

  • @captainkidd8755
    @captainkidd8755 Год назад +2

    Again to say The HMS victory is an ancient ship would be incorrect, ancient refers to the period before 1450, the Victory was made around 1750’s-1760’s

  • @cliffordolive1
    @cliffordolive1 Год назад +4

    A note on viking ships, notice the ridges along the hull from bow to stern! It is intentional to draw bubbles under the hull when in motion reducing friction between the vessel and the water and was ahead of its time in sailing ⛵️ technology 😈

  • @bryonensminger7462
    @bryonensminger7462 Год назад +2

    Between the Viking long ships and their invention of the sun stone for navigation they were Unstoppable virtually

    • @teggart123
      @teggart123 Год назад +1

      Viking long ships we’re fast but not able to board ships. Also the sun stone wasn’t invented by the Vikings and even the Egyptians were using lead lines to navigate the sea way before Viking excised

  • @jeremywells9019
    @jeremywells9019 Год назад +32

    You completely forgot the Polynesian vessels. They travelled the Oceans bringing their own crops and spread all over the darkest parts of the unknown islands.

    • @serronserron1320
      @serronserron1320 Год назад

      Indeed colonizing the remote Islands before anyone else

    • @wimokaharawira8443
      @wimokaharawira8443 Год назад

      No mention of anything outside of Europe

    • @nicholasgoodfellow5774
      @nicholasgoodfellow5774 Год назад +1

      Did you even watch the video? Id say egypt and china are outside of europe

    • @user-vp9ub1fm8y
      @user-vp9ub1fm8y Год назад

      You mean Kontiki?

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee 11 месяцев назад

      Damn straight. The ancient. Polynesians sailed better than anybody in the World too.

  • @ctucker430
    @ctucker430 2 года назад +1

    Warships are amazing these are right next to them

  • @robh3267
    @robh3267 Год назад +6

    I've always wandered how the viking ships did so well as they never seemed to have any protection for the crew from the elements, which at sea are extremely harsh.

    • @jackrice2770
      @jackrice2770 Год назад +4

      During a storm the sail would be tied over the open area, affording some protection. It should be noted that these ships did not actually make long voyages (look at a map of the North Sea, it's more like the Mediterranean than the Atlantic). Yes, the Northmen made it to the Americas, but they did it by going from Iceland to Greenland, then Greenland to Labrador, so they would only be at sea for a few weeks at most. The truly great open ocean sailors were the Chinese of the 15th Century, who sailed as far as the east coast of Africa and into the Red Sea, as well as all over the western Pacific, Indonesia, the Indian Ocean, etc. They were very large ships with hundreds of crew.

    • @robinharwood5044
      @robinharwood5044 Год назад +1

      Real Vikings didn’t need any protection from the elements. They were tough, not like those namby-pamby Romans. Read “How to train your dragon” to find out how tough they were.

  • @stephenspreckley8219
    @stephenspreckley8219 2 года назад +9

    It was good to finally see the Cutty Sark, which was I believe to be the fastest clipper ever and also the meaning of its name was " short skirt"

    • @h5mind373
      @h5mind373 2 года назад

      We had the pleasure of touring the Cutty Sark last year- very informative! The ship is actually visible on all sides do to its unique "display case". So you can comfortably walk under the hull, admiring the handiwork of its builders.

    • @anvietcongtiger1968
      @anvietcongtiger1968 2 года назад

      Years ago I saw some of ancient ships

    • @moosifer3321
      @moosifer3321 2 года назад

      Close but no Cigar - short SHIRT, plus she was the fastest Clipper on the Australian WOOL run, not the China Tea trade (speed important to be first back with new season tea- best prices! the Clipper`s `raison d`etre`), that record being held by Cutty`s famous rival, Thermopylae, although many believe our Heroine was faster and lost only due to losing her rudder in bad weather during one season`s `race`. I`m glad you`ve seen our lovely ship, ONE visit is never enough!

  • @kbbb4227
    @kbbb4227 Год назад +2

    Really love these shows, please keep up the hard work.

    • @dillon04
      @dillon04 Год назад +1

      Not when this guy can’t get his facts right!!!

    • @stevesculptor1
      @stevesculptor1 Год назад

      @@dillon04 Absolutely,

  • @christianmccollum1028
    @christianmccollum1028 Год назад

    I didn't know Christopher Reeve's great, great, grandfather designed the Flying Cloud. You learn something new everyday!

  • @akaoniryuu4564
    @akaoniryuu4564 Год назад +1

    This man will always be simple history for me

  • @tiberiusgaming1701
    @tiberiusgaming1701 Год назад +4

    Great video! But, The U.S.S. Constitution is still a commissioned vessel. In fact it's the U.S. Navy's oldest

  • @markpatterson4917
    @markpatterson4917 2 года назад +12

    Great Video loved your No.1. Please note Battle of Trafalgar was in 1805 not 1803 as mentioned love this period so my geekiness kicked in.

  • @sofakingonmynuts1438
    @sofakingonmynuts1438 8 месяцев назад +1

    Assassin's creed black flag features at least 2 of these ships.

  • @Hunter225
    @Hunter225 2 года назад

    Beautiful ships

  • @harbinger200
    @harbinger200 2 года назад +16

    Constitution is now my favorite named ship :D. Imagine "constitution" blasting everything in its path thats unconstitutional including central bank of US. Good one George.

    • @keithreinsel7842
      @keithreinsel7842 2 года назад +3

      Another cool bit of info for you: Her nickname is "Old Ironsides" because of how thick her hull was and the wood it was made of, most of the time cannonballs would just bounce off of it!

    • @harbinger200
      @harbinger200 2 года назад +1

      ​@@keithreinsel7842 Very cool. Early US is a nation that could have truly be free of financial systems and kings and queens. US constitution was one of the best on planet especially right to bear arms. hey just made one mistake. US needed a permanent national army composed of population besides the regular one to always be a warring to the government that corruption will not be allowed.

    • @barbatloosenutproductions2027
      @barbatloosenutproductions2027 2 года назад

      @@keithreinsel7842 The type of wood she was built from was white oak. Found here in America.🇺🇸 Oh, B.T.W. the same wood bowling alleys use. Very sturdy! 💪

    • @CrazyDavy22
      @CrazyDavy22 2 года назад

      @@keithreinsel7842 if you’ve ever seen Master and Commander the French ship was originally an American ship based on Old Ironsides but it was changed for the movie because they didn’t want to trigger Americans.

    • @RUfrikkinkiddinME
      @RUfrikkinkiddinME 2 года назад +1

      @@CrazyDavy22 they explain in the movie how she was built in Boston. Yankee built, they say.

  • @sethkaicer319
    @sethkaicer319 2 года назад +1

    Chris Kane always goes down with his ship.

  • @Dibleydog
    @Dibleydog 2 года назад +2

    Battle of Trafalgar 21st October 1805

  • @wak69
    @wak69 2 года назад +6

    The USS Constitution was never decommissioned. She's the oldest commissioned warship afloat, and the second oldest commissioned warship by time.

    • @65stang98
      @65stang98 2 года назад

      why in my imagination do i see in the final battle of the us existence the us constitution sails alone against a fleet of modern warships and is absolutley obliterated lmao

    • @brutusbarnabus8098
      @brutusbarnabus8098 Год назад

      @@65stang98 - because your name is Tyler which has predisposed you to becoming the beta-male that you are. Why do your parents hate you?

    • @stevesculptor1
      @stevesculptor1 Год назад +1

      Wrong, HMS Victory

    • @brutusbarnabus8098
      @brutusbarnabus8098 Год назад +1

      @@stevesculptor1 - Afloat being the operative word, zippy.

  • @JorgeRosa
    @JorgeRosa 9 месяцев назад +1

    They just missed the most terrifying naval war machine, from entire medieval era ... Botafogo ( Spitfire ) Galleon ( São João Baptista ) from Portugal, with its crew of 1300 men, mostly Military Order of Christ ( Templar Knights ). 1000 Tons, 366 Bronze cannons ( unique back fast reload ) that destroyed the Ottoman Empire from the Mediterranean sea, made the infamous Barbarossa Corsair retreat ... Never lost a single battle ... But these are just small details, it happens ... Besides that, "good" video & info ... 🧐

  • @thenoobyoufckinghate9814
    @thenoobyoufckinghate9814 Год назад +1

    I hope to one day visit UK to see the Victory and many other of England's amazing vessels.

  • @Drew791
    @Drew791 2 года назад +1

    Simple History narrator!! Yay!!

  • @carolellis1531
    @carolellis1531 Год назад +1

    this is excellent!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @lnwolf41
    @lnwolf41 Год назад +1

    My problem with your video is the lack of information that made them more advanced than their counterparts. I do know some of the improvements done, and or the unique build designs of these ships, but most people don't.

  • @studiobencivengamarcusbenc5272
    @studiobencivengamarcusbenc5272 2 года назад +1

    HMS victory looks so good - unbelievable! 🤗

    • @motelsuicide7048
      @motelsuicide7048 2 года назад +1

      Highly recommend a visit it's great being aboard.

  • @gastheleft6535
    @gastheleft6535 Год назад +2

    How could you forget the HMS Erebus and Terror? Extremely advanced for their time..

  • @andybelcher1767
    @andybelcher1767 Год назад +8

    The term 'Ancient' could be used relatively - I don't consider Victory, Flying Cloud, Beagle or Cutty Sark to be ancient, old yes.

    • @michaelbest5505
      @michaelbest5505 Год назад +2

      I thought the same thing! As soon as they introduced Victory, I thought I misread the title. 😂

  • @howardgreer1556
    @howardgreer1556 2 года назад +1

    Excellent and end informative! The background music however is far too loud and hypnotic to really enjoy because its hard to hear beyond it. Good content though!

  • @johnwilliamsscuba6487
    @johnwilliamsscuba6487 2 года назад +31

    What about the vessels in use by the Polynesians? They sailed the Pacific without benefits of navigational tools used by the Europeans. For centuries before they were discovered. I think they need some recognition here.

    • @arturoq9177
      @arturoq9177 2 года назад +1

      Their boat designs are mind boggling.

    • @billalexander4360
      @billalexander4360 2 года назад +1

      It's correct that the Polynesian ocean going 'canoes' should be recognized. The big Fijian drua were massive twin-hulled lateen-sail- rigged vessels that could literally sail rings around Captain Cook's ship in any winds. They migrated throughout the Pacific which is three times wider than the Atlantic ocean.

    • @MrShnazer
      @MrShnazer 2 года назад +2

      The title says advanced ships, not canoes.

    • @MrShnazer
      @MrShnazer 2 года назад

      @@billalexander4360 the title is ships not canoes big difference.

    • @V3ntilator
      @V3ntilator 2 года назад

      @@MrShnazer Yeah. Someone didn't read the title of the video. Canoes is not considered advanced.

  • @beejay2498
    @beejay2498 2 года назад +5

    How could you leave out the Mary Rose and the Warrior? Both in my home town of Portsmouth.

    • @jackrice2770
      @jackrice2770 Год назад

      Well, considering that the Mary Rose was a monumental flop, one supposes her role in naval history is how not to build a ship.

  • @benengel6555
    @benengel6555 Год назад +12

    Come on, I love the theme and the video, but you cannot seriously forget to include any Dutch vessel …. Our tiny little country ‘ruled the waves’ long before the British did and that was precisely because of our shipbuilding!

    • @Canadianvoice
      @Canadianvoice Год назад +2

      Rmemeber when the Dutch were beat by the Japanese during wwii

    • @billpugh58
      @billpugh58 Год назад +1

      Don’t worry, there are dutch documentaries that ignore Spanish ships.

    • @bush3126
      @bush3126 Год назад

      @@Canadianvoice are you reading the same thing as me?

  • @leondillon8723
    @leondillon8723 Год назад +1

    1:50)Most of the Longships floated in 2 feet of water. The best for "hit & git" and "loot & scoot" raids. Arriving,the front was on shore. Leaving, the front was pointing seaward.
    9:02)There is another Egyptian ship.The plans were carved into a building side. It has a rounded bottom.One was built and worked very well.
    10:07)A records search failed to turn up a Santa Maria. Maria Galante(Flirty Mary)was found. Wrecked near an island of that name. More censored history.
    12:31)What was left of the Nemi ships were destroyed in a fire caused by an Allied air raid.

  • @danielrodriguessilva2350
    @danielrodriguessilva2350 Год назад +8

    You should make a video talking about that Portuguese tecnology and the first ships from “Vasco da Gama” flleet that were the very first to circul navigate two diferent oceans

  • @airfunmachinery8655
    @airfunmachinery8655 2 года назад +3

    As always, useful and informative videos

    • @nattenaniel
      @nattenaniel 2 года назад +2

      And lots of wrong information.

    • @zhackiethedog
      @zhackiethedog 2 года назад +1

      @@nattenaniel true lmao

  • @matthiasnolte3817
    @matthiasnolte3817 Год назад

    Wonderfull vid!! But I agree to someone below, the "Vasa" is missing. But maybe more ships I can´t recall right now. I´d personally would have liked the mentioning of the Koggen of the european Hanse, too. But anyway. Great vid!!

  • @debrakildau9288
    @debrakildau9288 2 года назад

    I just love this guys voice !

  • @shakur060384
    @shakur060384 2 года назад +1

    What about fregatten jylland ? Wich still exist and can be visited in ebeltoft

  • @alfredop.escoval7619
    @alfredop.escoval7619 Год назад

    Not a single word about the Caravel...no discoveries all over the world without the Caravel which made it possible to cross winds and sail over the equator

  • @Games4dad
    @Games4dad 26 дней назад

    Gotta love these videos, you failed to mention many that are much more important than most represented here, like the Portuguese Caravel that was used to start the Age of Discovery or the São João Baptista (galleon) that in 1534 had 366 cannons for example.

  • @User-xp4kl
    @User-xp4kl Год назад +2

    Now where is HMS Warrior?? It was the best naval ship of its time hugely ahead of other countries navys. And you just mention random galleons like Queen Annes revenge? This isnt really thought through isn't it? Just random ships to fill the video idea.

  • @BattleshipBoy129-jk2zt
    @BattleshipBoy129-jk2zt 26 дней назад +1

    The Queen Ann’s Revenge actually not like the one in Pirates of the Caribbean, the Black Pearl is based off the real Queen Ann’s Revenge

  • @edguldbrandsen1836
    @edguldbrandsen1836 2 года назад +3

    surprised Bluenose not on this list

  • @francescobaruffi999
    @francescobaruffi999 Год назад +1

    My grandfather's old Buick should be on this list

  • @jamespostle6894
    @jamespostle6894 Год назад

    The khufu looks so sick

  • @therealslamshaky
    @therealslamshaky Месяц назад

    my boat, a Nordisk Snekke 29, has a design based on an old long boat design.

  • @deptusmechanikus7362
    @deptusmechanikus7362 2 года назад +2

    _Antique ships:_ heating and plumbing.
    _Medieval ships:_ *poop-deck*

  • @philosoraptor777
    @philosoraptor777 2 года назад +1

    16:43 The lack or co-ordination is making me feel nauseous.

  • @fortissimo6
    @fortissimo6 Год назад +3

    who else is procrastinating

    • @randydupere7787
      @randydupere7787 14 дней назад

      Me. I retired 7 years ago and I’m a journeyman procrastinator.

  • @yorkshirepudd7532
    @yorkshirepudd7532 2 года назад

    The victory is a bucket list visit amazing

  • @stevenzwolinski3047
    @stevenzwolinski3047 Год назад

    I visited the Victory, never forget it❤

  • @pickleballer1729
    @pickleballer1729 Год назад +1

    Koreans have made a number of interesting movies over the last few decades, one of which was about the Turtle ships. Prety good movie.

  • @Daniel_Kani
    @Daniel_Kani 9 месяцев назад

    1:27, Battle of Trafalgar was in 1805, not 1803.

  • @wes788411
    @wes788411 Год назад +4

    It would have been a hard life sailing the seas in a viking ship. Having no cabin to protect you from the elements. Also, I wonder what they were eating during their voyages.

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l Год назад

      Not too bad at least compared to any other sailing vessel before the advent of cans and refeigeration. They mainly ate salted meat of all kinds mostly fish, beef and mutton. They fished during the voyage as well as frequently keeping chickens for eggs. They drank water, beer and sour milk. Cooking was only done on land if they spotted some island along the way for instance. But yes being a sailor on a 19th century frigate was a lot more comfortable than a long boat. They also mostly didn't sail during winter, at least not long distances.

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Год назад

      The best is junk boat sailed by Javanese sailormen from first century. The ship traveled across south africa, egypt. What made it best is that the ship was so big, the sailors often took family and livestock along with it. Also the fact that their staple, rice was/is easier to store compare to wheat made ration problem non-existence.

  • @calebbrown6735
    @calebbrown6735 Год назад

    Clippers really were game changers

  • @fernandoduarte3628
    @fernandoduarte3628 2 года назад +5

    No surprises when it was done by América the vidro, where is the Portuguese Caravelle that changed world history, the Portuguese carrack that changed trade, the Portuguese man at war that chapel the first empire of Europe in the east. Where is the biggest carrack ever build, etc etc etc. Shame on the video but it’s a very Anglo Saxon way of looking to the world.

  • @jacobsmithjr
    @jacobsmithjr Год назад +1

    Very interesting presentation but I can't believe you didn't mention the USS Constitution nickname (Old Ironsides) and why she was given the name.

  • @ryandtibbetts2962
    @ryandtibbetts2962 Год назад +1

    The Virginia, built by the members of the Popham Colony in Maine between 1607-08, was the first ship constructed in North America.

    • @aarondavis8433
      @aarondavis8433 11 месяцев назад

      The failed to mention the CSS Virginia too, which was the first Iron clad wooden ship making all other ships obsolete

  • @kickinghorse2405
    @kickinghorse2405 Год назад

    Cutty Sark!!!
    Hoo rah!

  • @trevorfillmore698
    @trevorfillmore698 2 года назад +3

    I can't believe you left out the Bluenoese to me it could of bumped quite a few of these ships.

    • @FlatlandMando
      @FlatlandMando Год назад

      Certainly would have been a nod to Canadian ship- builders & mariners

    • @trevorfillmore698
      @trevorfillmore698 Год назад

      @@FlatlandMando not only that but it was an amazing schooner she was the fastest and she worked fishing not just a little fishing to say she fished she was a fishing schooner first and raced second and her captain Angus Walters was like they were one.

  • @scottmaxwell5249
    @scottmaxwell5249 2 года назад +2

    Give Canada its due. The Bluenose 2 is still in service. Check it out in Lunenburg Nova Scotia.Its beautiful.

    • @Aron-ru5zk
      @Aron-ru5zk Год назад

      Bluenose 2 was built in 1962….

  • @FiferSkipper
    @FiferSkipper 2 года назад +4

    4:10 There is no possible way 2000 people could fit on a 180 foot vessel. More like 200...MAX!

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 2 года назад +1

      Piling up one above the other *. . . ;-)*

    • @aaronwatkins8973
      @aaronwatkins8973 Год назад +1

      Yeah I think maybe they meant meters?

    • @FiferSkipper
      @FiferSkipper Год назад

      @@aaronwatkins8973 ...I think you're right.

  • @tariqkhan3735
    @tariqkhan3735 2 года назад

    Wow 👍👍👍

  • @treeguy7490
    @treeguy7490 Год назад

    Anyone notice HMS Victory having the Dutch flag...a bit of history not usually mentioned.

  • @moosifer3321
    @moosifer3321 2 года назад +9

    Nice to see the ever beautiful Cutty Sark at #1 (I`ve visited her many times). However, what about Vasa, Mary Rose, Erebus & Terror, the latter two having been (fairly) recently located in Canadian Arctic waters and remarkably preserved, originally built very heavily as Bomb Ketches (armed with large Mortars) and thus thought suitable for Franklins doomed expedition to find the Northwest Passage? The Black Sea has also revealed several Ancient wrecks in amazing condition due to the anerobic waters of the depths, similarly, the Baltic has many Medieval wrecks (incuding Catherine the Great`s `Treasure ship`) saved by the lack of salinity. Most people think of the Vikings cruising around pillaging in Longships, but in fact they were accomplished traders and explorers (Iceland, Greenland and indeed N America - suck on THAT Columbus!), so a more likely candidate for those voyages would be the Knorr, a more beamy version, a true Merchant ship and thus able to carry more cargo as well as several dozen Flaxen Haired Beserkers as armourment! (check out the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde, Denmark, they have the ONLY one) Nice video, Thumbs Up, Subscribed!

  • @angelf2966
    @angelf2966 2 года назад +3

    The Santísima Trinidad had 140 cannons, the Victory only 102, she was the most powerful of the 15 but she does not appear on the list...very strange. In Trafalgar UK fought against a Spanish-French coalition led by the always disastrous French military.

    • @9thring_vf_hxll
      @9thring_vf_hxll 2 года назад

      Santísima Trinidad and HMS Victory is vert different
      Santisima trinidad was a Frigate and HMS Victory is a 1st rate
      Fact: Santisima Trinidad was similar to the Ship also build by spanish in Philippines, The Manila Galleon

    •  2 года назад +3

      well.. portuguese ship Bota Fogo had 366 cannons in 1500 .. 250 years before HMS Victory

    • @henrilopes7337
      @henrilopes7337 2 года назад +3

      The portuguese galleon "Botafogo" built in 1530 had 366 cannons.

    • @drpepper3838
      @drpepper3838 2 года назад

      @@henrilopes7337 366? Doubt. unless they counted a whole load of shipboard firearms such as muskets and swivel guns as part of the total and even then, those aren’t really cannons. The most gunned ship ever to be reliably recording is the Spanish ship Nuestra Señora de la Santísima Trinidad - Wikipedia, and it only a maximum of 140 guns at its height

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l Год назад

      Santisima didn't do well in battle though. She temporarily surrendered during the battle of Cape St. Vincent to a British 3rd rate of 74 guns and during Trafalger she didn't fare much better. Captured and so badly damaged she sank in the huge storm after the battle that claimed many of the damaged ships of the battle. HMS Victory was a lot more maneuverable.

  • @YautjaSpacePirate
    @YautjaSpacePirate Месяц назад +1

    Yarr! Yer ship is mine!!! 🏴‍☠️☠⚓☠🏴‍☠️

  • @natethetoe386
    @natethetoe386 Год назад

    Now I want to go watch Black Sails again.

  • @somebody1241
    @somebody1241 Год назад

    Also Mahmudiye. Largest wooden ship of the 19th century

  • @tendraftsdeep
    @tendraftsdeep 2 года назад

    Winning!

  • @stargazeronesixseven
    @stargazeronesixseven Год назад

    Impressive indeed! Ahoy! Yes Captain! 🌍🕊

  • @merlin5420
    @merlin5420 Год назад +1

    Meantime the Polynesians were cruising the biggest ocean on the planet with double hull waka (catamaran)

  • @nessuno1948
    @nessuno1948 Год назад +1

    Trafalgar's battle: october 1805, not 1803.

  • @Runescope
    @Runescope Год назад

    Totally missed the Bluenose, and Bluenose II.

  • @9thring_vf_hxll
    @9thring_vf_hxll 2 года назад +2

    The chinese treasure ship was a class of Ship Called "Junk"
    It was like a 1st Rate but more relying on cargo

    • @normanbraslow7902
      @normanbraslow7902 2 года назад

      And about half the size the Chinese claim. Wooden ships just cannot be that long.

    • @i7Qp4rQ
      @i7Qp4rQ 2 года назад

      @@normanbraslow7902 That's a common strawman against Noah's 500ft ship too. Did _you_ make a testmodel?

    • @normanbraslow7902
      @normanbraslow7902 2 года назад

      Ernest Camps The Ark, assuming it existed, did not sail. It floated, and drifted. Huge difference.

    • @deeanis77
      @deeanis77 8 месяцев назад

      Not "junk" but "Jong" and it's a Malay word for big ship and you can research it under Admiral Cheng Ho

  • @MartinSage
    @MartinSage Год назад

    I assume that Victory was covered with thick metal armor covering the outside.

  • @thomasmacken9721
    @thomasmacken9721 Год назад

    Will HMS Victory ever get it's masts spars & rigging back again?

  • @leafarasta4517
    @leafarasta4517 2 месяца назад

    Love how casually this video didnt mention portuguese galleon Saint John the Baptist nicknamed"Spitfire" that would put HMS Victory into shame

  • @I_live_in_your_walls.
    @I_live_in_your_walls. 2 месяца назад

    For anyone interested there are a bunch of big sailing ships from the 17th and 18th century in the Netherlands. They are however all rebuild ships because those ships don’t have a very long lifespan. Sadly one of em burned down a few years ago. But they still have quite a few of them and they’re definitely worth checking out if you’re interested in those kinds of ships.

  • @jopekoroisavou8275
    @jopekoroisavou8275 Год назад

    Fijian Drua, was also a ship advance of its time.

  • @mbczadgjl
    @mbczadgjl 2 года назад +1

    The Bluenose !

  • @user-vp9ub1fm8y
    @user-vp9ub1fm8y Год назад

    The first three are trully badasses.Constitution,blackbeards one and Cutty Sark.

  • @dukedolgoch
    @dukedolgoch 9 месяцев назад

    How come these ships were preserved but the ocean liners weren't😢