15 AMAZING Medieval Ships
Вставка
- Опубліковано 9 тра 2024
- The medieval period marked a massive increase in shipbuilding. After a period of instability in Europe, ships began to be built so that European wars and trade routes could be expanded. At the same time, other areas of the globe were also improving their ships in order to interact with the world around them. This ultimately led to the Age of Exploration and both mass globalization and colonization. So today, get ready to set sail and learn about how this change became at all possible as we go through the Top 15 Amazing Medieval Ships!
#ship #ships #history #top15
Several segments are licensed under creative commons
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
For more video information, please visit our website.
The Top Fives show brings you informational and entertaining top five videos! Join us and subscribe for more.
Follow Josh on Instagram! Founder and producer of the Top Fives show. Stay up to date with the channel and everything UA-cam and business related! / joshuajosephbaker
Follow us on Facebook!
/ topfivesyoutube
Contact us via the email form here: ua-cam.com/users/topfivesabout
Note: The videos featured on the Top Fives channel are for educational and informational purposes. If you have a good idea for a video, leave us a comment! We try to read each and every comment made. - Розваги
I got to live and sail on a caravel. It was a replica of La Niña and it was made all of Brazilian tropical hardwood using traditional techniques and was in some ways better than the originals due to the superior quality of wood.
Climbing the rigging without rat lines and hauling the anchor by hand could be a little daunting, but it was a great three months!
You had a adventure of a lifetime.
Gonna be honest I would love to see these ships in person.
We have an shallow fjord in Denmark called Holckenhavn (Holk harbor). The Caravel was used as a tre masted warship in Scandinavia (at least two was build in 1510 and 1517 respectively) - a sleeker version of the Galleon.
I love how they say "the calm waters of the Mediterranean", then look up storms on the Mediterranean, it's not so calm,lol.
I noted all your ‘Hulks’ were late eighteenth early nineteenth century ships of the line
I note the Eurocentric approach. Nothing about the Pacific and its diverse multi hull voyaging canoes and outriggers. These were skilled navigators and explorers who ventured over the Pacific which covers one third of the earths surface. Large vaka, double hulled canoes were made without iron or steel tools. Coral, shell and stone were all that was available. These vessels were fast, stable and safe, totally constructed from local material. The designs came from the Lapita peoples from Melanesia over 3000 years ago, who settled in Tonga, Samoa and Fiji before moving on to Eastern Polynesia and last of all New Zealand.
But they didn't come and say Hello to the European
The middle ages were the middle ages in Europe.
I think I would use the Gallie
Very interesting n informative im an ol history nut so familiar with most I've forgotten more history tgan most ever knew or will.
Lot of these ships I wouldnt call medieval.
A lot of these I wouldn't call ships.
The Hansiatic League used the Cog. The hulk was an unservicable moored or agroind, used as accommodation for sailers or as prisons.
The orgin of the "Swedish" skip is from Central Russia 1500BC.
You meant to say the Galleys were confided mostly to the Mediterranean.
0:55 These are not medieval hulks, but retired 18th century warships given the same nickname.
1:22 Is a Humber Keel, not a Balingor
1:42 The oldest surviving ship on the planet is the Khufu ship dating from 2500bc, but there are also dugout canoes dated to 7000bc.
8:43 It's spelt 'carrack' not 'carrick'. Also needs to come after the section on caravels.
12:30 It's spelt 'Kon Tiki' not 'conteki'
22:20 It's spelt 'knarr' not 'canar'.
As 'Medieval' refers to a period of *European* history from about 500 to 1500, the dhow, north american canoe, Kon Tiki and junk are all outside this definition. Especially the Kon Tiki, which is a speculative ship from *1947* and does not actually represent a historical vessel.
What this video calls the Hulk was actually called the Hanseatic Cog. There are a number of inacurracies, in your video
Where is the Philippines acceint boat called balangay ?
Kamperkogge
Love your videos! Thank you!!
I appreciate contribution of Scandinavian ships
But u may also check marathas and cholas war ships and kalinga's trade ships
These were huge naval power during medieval india
You know, the Medieval period is a catagorization that refers specifically to Europe. Historiographically speaking, pre-Contact North America weren't in a Medieval Age.
Chris Kane convinced Captain Bligh that flogging people was never an option.😢
I instead convinced him that walking the plank was a better option.
So, basically, Chris Kane was kink shaming Captain Bligh?
@@tetedur377 Aye aye.
Chris Kane is my favorite 💯💯
This should be followed right after "Notorious pirates in history" but it's ok. All the ships are beautiful and magnificent.
Amazing,,,
if they were sun to block intruders and were there for centuries were they effective in being barriers? did people just avoid them ever since?
🇺🇸
First comment please pin it lots of love from india ❤❤❤❤❤❤
One could wish that the fact checking was better in this video.
did you fact check everything he said?
Fake. There was never such a ship as depicted in the screenshot above. Fakes turn me off and away, so I won't waste my time watching anything with fake or false information.I would expect false ship depictions inside this video, too, probably even mixing up epochs, ship types with each other...
Still commented tho
@@ethantori6921 Yes, of course. As a warning to anyone who considers watching this.
who cares 😂🙄
@@gloria88246 I do. Too much fake everywhere, we need to call out liars.
Hi
Bonjour de BRETAGNE !
Hye from BRITTANY !
and the ARMENIAN SHIPS ?
in straigt line of HERODOTE ,
why you don't speak about ? the name is CILICIA ;
Am I the only one who finds it really irritating that the illustrations don't seem to have any relation to the ships they're discussing for a lot of this? Really poorly researched, for the hulk they just googled the name and ended up showing pictures of prison hulks which were a 19th-century invention...
Plenty of good videos about ships on youtube but this ain't one of them
The image at the beginning is pure fiction. The dates are often at odds with the narration... basically junk!