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#1
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Wilbur Hubbard wrote:
I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine.' Wilbur Hubbard http://www.answers.com/brig&r=67 Note that the first definition is from the *American* heritage dictionary (so this is not your language being differnt!), and it has a link to brigantine with the description of the different rig. Andy |
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#2
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"Andy Champ" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine.' Wilbur Hubbard http://www.answers.com/brig&r=67 Note that the first definition is from the *American* heritage dictionary (so this is not your language being differnt!), and it has a link to brigantine with the description of the different rig. Andy Wrong! Let me repeat. A brigantine is a two masted vessel, square-rigged but with fore and aft mainsail. http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/d.../d0002703.html http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/brigantine http://www.geocities.com/cjstein_2000/dictionary.html#B note: a gaff sail is a fore and aft sail. Wilbur Hubbard |
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#3
posted to alt.sailing.tall-ships,uk.rec.sailing
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"Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message anews.com... "Andy Champ" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine.' Wilbur Hubbard http://www.answers.com/brig&r=67 Note that the first definition is from the *American* heritage dictionary (so this is not your language being differnt!), and it has a link to brigantine with the description of the different rig. Andy Wrong! Let me repeat. A brigantine is a two masted vessel, square-rigged but with fore and aft mainsail. http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/d.../d0002703.html http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/brigantine http://www.geocities.com/cjstein_2000/dictionary.html#B note: a gaff sail is a fore and aft sail. Wilbur Hubbard There's little point in quoting references on the internet, most of them are plagiarised from other sources (for example, Google any of the phrases that support the above arguments, such as "A two-masted sailing ship, square-rigged on both masts." or "a two-Masted vessel with both masts square rigged. On the sternmost mast, the main mast, there is also a gaff sail.") I'm not convinced that there's a hard and fast definition. Sailing vessels are constantly evolving so they make the most of the extant sailing conditions, so having a brig (square rigged only) and adding a fore and aft sail (it's still a brig) seems perfectly reasonable. Alisdair |
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#4
posted to alt.sailing.tall-ships,uk.rec.sailing
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Wilbur Hubbard wrote:
"Andy Champ" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine.' Wilbur Hubbard http://www.answers.com/brig&r=67 Note that the first definition is from the *American* heritage dictionary (so this is not your language being differnt!), and it has a link to brigantine with the description of the different rig. Andy Wrong! Let me repeat. A brigantine is a two masted vessel, square-rigged but with fore and aft mainsail. http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/d.../d0002703.html http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/brigantine http://www.geocities.com/cjstein_2000/dictionary.html#B note: a gaff sail is a fore and aft sail. Wilbur Hubbard Perhaps my snipping is innacurate, or perhaps you are trolling (and no, I am not referring to piscatorial activities) but it seems to me that the three links you have given all have seperate definitions for "Brig", and none of them suggest that it is merely "a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine' ". This has little to do with whether the Trust is correct to sell its vessel. Andy |
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#5
posted to alt.sailing.tall-ships,uk.rec.sailing
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"Andy Champ" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: "Andy Champ" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine.' Wilbur Hubbard http://www.answers.com/brig&r=67 Note that the first definition is from the *American* heritage dictionary (so this is not your language being differnt!), and it has a link to brigantine with the description of the different rig. Andy Wrong! Let me repeat. A brigantine is a two masted vessel, square-rigged but with fore and aft mainsail. http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/d.../d0002703.html http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/brigantine http://www.geocities.com/cjstein_2000/dictionary.html#B note: a gaff sail is a fore and aft sail. Wilbur Hubbard Perhaps my snipping is innacurate, or perhaps you are trolling (and no, I am not referring to piscatorial activities) but it seems to me that the three links you have given all have seperate definitions for "Brig", and none of them suggest that it is merely "a lubberly shortening of the word 'brigantine' ". This has little to do with whether the Trust is correct to sell its vessel. Andy I Googled some pics of the Trust's brigs (they are brigs according to definition because the pictures showed they are both square-rigged on both masts with no fore-and-aft sails on the masts) and they are nice looking boats. But, whose to say the Trust doesn't have good reason to sell whatever boats they want to sell Wilbur Hubbard |
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#6
posted to alt.sailing.tall-ships,uk.rec.sailing
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Wilbur Hubbard wrote:
I Googled some pics of the Trust's brigs (they are brigs according to definition because the pictures showed they are both square-rigged on both masts with no fore-and-aft sails on the masts) and they are nice looking boats. Must try harder on the old observational skills, matey. They *do* have a fore-and-aft sail on the after mast. It seems to be a common feature of virtualy all sizeable vessels of this era that at least the after mast always has at least one gaff sail. One must presume there must have been a technical reason for this. The distinction between brig and brigantine is simply whether the after mast is *exclusively* fore-and-aft or *also* has square sails. |
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#7
posted to alt.sailing.tall-ships,uk.rec.sailing
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"Ronald Raygun" wrote in message ... Wilbur Hubbard wrote: I Googled some pics of the Trust's brigs (they are brigs according to definition because the pictures showed they are both square-rigged on both masts with no fore-and-aft sails on the masts) and they are nice looking boats. Must try harder on the old observational skills, matey. They *do* have a fore-and-aft sail on the after mast. It seems to be a common feature of virtualy all sizeable vessels of this era that at least the after mast always has at least one gaff sail. One must presume there must have been a technical reason for this. The distinction between brig and brigantine is simply whether the after mast is *exclusively* fore-and-aft or *also* has square sails. The photos I Googled showed both of them sailing together and neither on had a fore and aft sail on the mainmast. Both masts were square-rigged from top to bottom. http://www.tallshipsyouthtrust.net/d...t=693&doc=6823 This means they are rightly called 'brigs.' If they were fitted with a gaff mainsail at some time earlier or later then they should be called 'brigantines.' See the link with illustrations I posted further up this thread. I hope this helps. Wilbur Hubbard |
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#8
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Wilbur Hubbard wrote:
The photos I Googled showed both of them sailing together and neither on had a fore and aft sail on the mainmast. Both masts were square-rigged from top to bottom. http://www.tallshipsyouthtrust.net/d...t=693&doc=6823 That picture shows them from ahead which makes it difficult to see whether the gaff sails on the main masts are present. Go to their homepage http://www.tallshipsyouthtrust.net and there is a photo of one of them from less directly ahead, where you can clearly see a gaff sail on the after mast (and the mainsail, i.e. the bottom-most square sail on the main mast, is present, but furled). On the menu along the left, click on "The Ships" (which takes you to the page you mentioned, with the photo of the two side by side), and then on "Our Tall Ships". This takes you to a page which contains a photo from the quarter, which makes it a bit clearer. On the same page there is also a sail plan with names, and the gaff sail is identified as a "spanker". This means they are rightly called 'brigs.' We're agreed on that, at least. If they were fitted with a gaff mainsail at some time earlier or later then they should be called 'brigantines.' Not if the gaff sails were there *as well as* the square sails. A brigantine has no (provision to set) square sails on the after mast at all, but if a brig (which of course has square sails on both masts) also carries a spanker (as it usually does), that doesn't make it a brigantine. |
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