Felucca

Felucca on the Nile at Luxor

A felucca (Arabic: فلوكة, romanizedfalawaka, possibly originally from Greek ἐφόλκιον, epholkion[1]) is a traditional wooden sailing boat with a single sail used in the Mediterranean—including around Malta and Tunisia. However in Egypt, Iraq and Sudan (particularly along the Nile and in the Sudanese protected areas of the Red Sea), its rig can consist of two lateen sails as well as just one.

They are usually able to board ten passengers and the crew consists of two or three people.

Contemporary accounts assert that in the summer of 1610, a felucca was the last boat on which Italian painter Caravaggio traveled from Naples,[2] then under Spanish control, to Palo, Italy whereafter he died in Porto Ercole.

  1. ^ El Houssi, Abdelmajid. Retour sur l'étymologie de felouque (PDF). p. 20.
  2. ^ "Kingdom of Naples", Wikipedia, 2024-06-23, retrieved 2024-06-30

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search