This reminds me of the classic Junks and Sampans of the Yangtse by G. R. G. Worcester (reprint: https://www.usni.org/press/books/junks-and-sampans-yangtze)
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Great resource !Bought a used copy this week. Enjoyed looking through it yesterday. Now to find some time to read it, little by little that is.View attachment 524251
Bought a used copy this week. Enjoyed looking through it yesterday. Now to find some time to read it, little by little that is.
That is a real bargain for that interesting set of books and drawings. Do you plan to build a cog or boat?Just my lucky day. Found this awesome publication discounted from € 249,50 to € 25,00, new in seal. Comes with 35 A1 plans and 35 A2 plans.
Nice find, indeed! Congrats!Just my lucky day. Found this awesome publication discounted from € 249,50 to € 25,00, new in seal. Comes with 35 A1 plans and 35 A2 plans.
The text below is from the publisher's website, the photo's are mine.
No, just a matter of general interest. And I love books, especially those with maps and plans.That is a real bargain for that interesting set of books and drawings. Do you plan to build a cog or boat?
If you're speaking to 'me'... Seawatch books has them. If you 'weren't' addressing me... go to Seawatch and buy this book anyway!You are a lucky guy or a perpicace web searcher. However, could you Say where you Found IT?
I just went to their website and didn't see this set for sale.Just my lucky day. Found this awesome publication discounted from € 249,50 to € 25,00, new in seal. Comes with 35 A1 plans and 35 A2 plans.
The text below is from the publisher's website, the photo's are mine.
Cogs, small cogs and boats , Vlierman, K.
Hardcover, 2 parts, 1000 pp. With 70 A1 and A2 drawings, all in luxe casette. SPA uitgevers 2021
From the thirteenth to the fifteenth century an important part of the economy in north western Europe was based on trade in the Hanseatic League. The main means of transport consisted of ships, mainly cogs. The importance of this type of ship was already apparent from medieval documents, miniatures and other sources.
One of the world's largest collections of medieval shipwrecks emerged after the Second World War during the partial reclamation of the IJsselmeer lake (the former Zuiderzee inlet) in the Netherlands, where three polders were created from 1942 onwards. During these works, hundreds of shipwrecks from the period between 1250 and 1900 were discovered, about twenty of these being cogs.
Maritime archaeologist Karel Vlierman has excavated shipwrecks all his working life. He dedicated himself to the research of these ships, including two cogs found at Doel near Antwerp and the recently uncovered cog from the river IJssel near Kampen. His research of more than twenty years has resulted in a monograph of over 950 richly illustrated pages, together with some 70 large technical drawings of all the investigated cogs and their reconstructions.
The monograph and the folder with the 70 technical drawings - in A1 and A2 format - together come in a fine slipcase.
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Hello,
IT is not on Seawatchbook, but could be interesting to know where Hatteras bought them. We should not ne confuse between Hatteras and MThomas pourchases.I just went to their website and didn't see this set for sale.
Could you please provide a link?
Thanks!
Hello @Allegheny ,I just went to their website and didn't see this set for sale.
Could you please provide a link?
Thanks!