Nordic clinker boat traditions

Nordic clinker boat traditions
technique, heritage, tradition
Yaɣ shelibuilding of pleasure and sporting boats Mali niŋ
Tingbani shɛli din yinaDenmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden Mali niŋ
Product or material produced or service providedwooden boat Mali niŋ
Intangible cultural heritage statusRepresentative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, National Inventory of Living Heritage in Finland, Immateriell kulturarv, Living traditions – An inventory of intangible cultural heritage in Sweden Mali niŋ
A Viking longship, displaying the overlapping planks that characterize clinker construction

Clinker-built (bɛ ni lahi booni shɛli lapstrake)[1][2] nyɛla bɛ ni maani shitimanima shɛm ka shitima maa maŋmaŋa nangbanbiya puli ga n-ga taba. Shitima kara malibu ni, bɛ ni tooi zaŋ kuri jihi jihi n gɔhi taba nangbanbiya maa naabu sheei, ka di tooi sɔŋ ka bɛ mali shitima din gbunni yɛlima.

Lala baŋsim ŋɔ pili la Scandinavia, ka Anglo-Saxons, Frisians daa zaŋ li n-ku bukaata viɛnyɛla, ka Scandinavians, din tooi be "vessels" shɛŋa din yuli booni "cogs" ni, ka Hanseatic League nima mali li n tumdi tuma. Carvel malbui, luɣ'shɛli tariti ni gɔhi taba kaba ka gbiragbira ka ni, "seam to seam", kamani hulks kara ni. (Lihimi Comparison between clinker and carvel din doli ŋɔ na)[3]

Clinker-built boats shɛhira din daa yina nadaa ha nyɛla din be Thames skiffs, ka di zaɣ'titali "cargo-carrying" Norfolk wherries be England.[4]

  1. Webb, Michael. Clinker Boat History & Building.
  2. Lapstrake.
  3. Clinker and Carvel – different types of planking.
  4. Clinker Boat Building.

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