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Barque - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Barque has three or more masts with square sails on all except the mizzen (aft) mast. ... Picton Castle is a 300 ton steel barque. The sail training workshops on board include rigging, sail-making, boat handling and navigation.
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Hamburg (barque) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hamburg was a three masted barque built in 1886 at Hantsport, Nova Scotia. She was the largest three masted barque ever built in Canada . Hamburg was one of the last of over a hundred large saili...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_(barque) |
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Jackass-barque - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A jackass-barque , sometimes spelled jackass bark, is a sailing ship with 3 (or more) masts, of which the foremast is square-rigged and the main is partially square-rigged (topsail, topgallant, etc....
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackass-barque |
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Home of the Barque Picton Castle. Its mission is deep-ocean sail training and long-distance education. Global circumnavigation under sail, which the Picton Castle will again undertake in 2008, is the grand adventure of a lifetime. ... The Barque Picton Castle, a sail training tall ship based in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia,
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A barque is a vessel with at least three masts, all of them fully square rigged except for the sternmost one, which is fore-and-aft rigged. ... The wooden three-masted barque was the most common type of deep-water cargo-carrier in the middle of the 19th century. However, only one such vessel has survived to our days -
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Very welcome to the Sailing Ships WWW site! I hope you will find it interesting and informative. It has been online since 15 October 1996. ... The main part of this site is a database of historical sailing vessels, with technical data as well as ``biographical'' information on ... This site is always a work in progress.
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Encyclopedia article about barque. Information about barque in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... barque (esp US), bark...
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Barque or Bark , usually a three masted vessel, the fore and main masts square rigged and the mizzen mast or after mast rigged fore and aft. The four masted barque was a relatively common rig on the oceans, but only two were built in Canada.
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Four-masted barque (Kemp 1988:61) ... From the Latin barca, and now synonymous with barque, originally a general term to describe any small sailing ship of any rig. A sailing vessel with three masts, square-rigged on the fore and main and fore and aft rigged on the mizzen.
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