- Dragon Harald Fairhair (ship)
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Dragon Harald Fairhair. The ninth strake soon in place.Career (Norway) Norway
Name: Dragon Harald Fairhair (Norwegian: Draken Harald Hårfagre) Namesake: Harald Fairhair (Harald I of Norway) Laid down: March 2010 Launched: 2012 (planned) Status: Under construction General characteristics Type: Replica Viking longship Tons burthen: 70 metric tons Length: 35 m (115 ft) Beam: 7.5 m (25 ft) Propulsion: 25 pairs of oars
Sail (300 m2 (3,200 square feet)Complement: Minimum of 100 under oars
Minimum of 12–14 under sailThe Dragon Harald Fairhair (Norwegian: Draken Harald Hårfagre) is a large replica Viking longship under production in the municipality of Haugesund, Norway. When finished, the Dragon Harald Fairhair will bring the seafaring qualities of a warship from the old Norse sagas to life. It will be a ship that combines ocean-crossing sailing capabilities with a warship's use of oars.
Contents
Construction and launch
Building began in March 2010. The launching of the longship is scheduled for the summer 2012. Because no one today has real experience handling a Viking ship of this size, the initial period will be one of exploring how to sail and row the ship, and for experimentation with the rigging along the coast of Norway. By summer 2013 the longship should be ready for its first real expedition.
An oceangoing Norwegian warship
The longship is a '25-sesse' (25 pairs of oars) – in other words, it is equipped with 50 oars. Each oar is powered by two men and the ship must have a crew of 100 persons, minimum. Under sail it requires a crew of 12–14 people.
When finished, the Dragon Harald Fairhair will be 35 metres (115 ft) long with a beam of approximately 7.5 metres (25 ft) and a displacement of about 70 metric tons. The longship is constructed in oak and it will carry 300 square metres (3,200 sq ft) of sail.
The Dragon Harald Fairhair will be the largest Viking ship built in modern times. But in the Viking Age, many such ships were of this size. At that time, it would be quite typical for a Norwegian warship (Norwegian: leidangsskip). The law of the land in those days (Norwegian: Gulatingsloven) included standards that required Norwegian provinces (fylker) to cooperate in supplying 116 such warships of 50 oars size (Norwegian: 25-sesser) (25 pairs of oars) for duty in the Norwegian fleet of warships.[1]
Norwegian boatbuilding traditions
Copies of Viking ships are usually based on interpretations of archaeological material. But in construction of the Dragon Harald Fairhair an alternative method has been used. It was decided to begin with the living tradition of Norwegian boatbuilding, with roots that can be traced directly to the Viking Age.[2][3] The foremost Norwegian traditional boat builders are involved in the project.[4] Their knowledge of traditional boatbuilding is supplemented with the results of investigations carried out on archaeological material, source material in Norse literature, literature from the same period from foreign sources, iconographic material, etc. The goal of the project is to recreate in this manner an oceangoing warship of 50 oars taken right out of the Norse Sagas.
Notes
- ^ A. W. Brøgger and H. Shetelig. "Vikingeskipene- Deres forgjengere og etterfølgere" Dreyers forlag 1950, p. 213
- ^ Bent og Erik Andersen. "Råsejlet - Dragens Vinge". Vikingsskipsmuseet Forlag, Roskilde 2007, p. 9-44
- ^ Jon B. Godal: “Measurements, figures and formulas for the interpretation of Western Norwegian boats and Viking ships”, Acta Boralia ,1990. Volume 7, Issue 2, pages 56-80
- ^ Gunnar Eldjarn og Jon B. Godal: "Nordlandsbåten og Åfjordsbåten", bind 1-4. A Kiellands Forlag, Lesja 1988.
External links
- Official website
- Forskningsråd (Norwegian Research Counsil)
- Universitetet i Tromsø (University of Tromsø)
- Report. Rekonstruksjon av hudreip fra yngre jernalder 550 e. Kr – 1066 e.Kr
- George Indruszewski and Jon B. Godal, “Maritime skills and astronomic knowledge in the Viking Age Baltic Sea.” Studia mythological Slavica 9, 2006. (p 15 – 39)
- Teknisk Ukeblad
- Article from Norwegian Embassy in Moscow website
- Article from BarentsObserver.com
Categories:- 2010s ships
- Individual sailing vessels
- Rowing
- Ships built in Norway
- Viking Age
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