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==References and Notes==
 
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[[Category:Ships| ]]
 
[[Category:Ships| ]]

Revision as of 08:09, 13 September 2014

First mate by henning.jpg
Blacktyde longship by MarcSimonetti
Sallas escort ship by MarcSimonetti
Suicide raider by MarcSimonetti

Ships are watercraft used in the Known World. They include smaller fisher boats and raider vessels, various warships and trade ships, up to the huge war dromonds and the magnificent swan ships that cross the Summer Sea.

Ships in the World

Seven Kingdoms

The major fleets of the Seven Kingdoms are the Iron Fleet and the fleets of the ironborn, based in the Iron Islands, the royal fleet based at King's Landing and Dragonstone, and the Redwyne fleet based at the Arbor.[1] The North has had no strength at sea since Brandon the Burner put Brandon the Shipwright's remaining ships to the torch hundreds of years ago.[2]

In the rest of the Seven Kingdoms, lords whose lands abut the coast might keep a war galley or three for coastal defense against pirates, but only major houses like the Lannisters have larger and grander fleets of twenty to thirty ships. Usually for major battles, the lords call the ships of their various bannermen.[1] While the Greyjoys' main force is the Iron Fleet, they can also raise hundreds of ironborn ships. However, most of those will be longships made for raids rather than battle, comparable to lesser war galleys elsewhere in the Seven Kingdoms. Other Westerosi lords are more likely to have larger and more formidable ships like cogs, carracks, and war galleys of various sides, up to the great dromonds with scorpions and catapults on deck.[3]

The Tyrells are in more or less the same position as the Lannisters, though they depend even more on their bannermen, especially the lords of the Shield Islands off the mouth of theMander. The Hightowers have only a few warships, but control Oldtown, home to numerous trading vessels.[1]

Essos

In Qarth the Thirteen control about 1,000 ships, the Ancient Guild of Spicers own about 1,200 or 1,300, and the Tourmaline Brotherhood has about 800.[4] The Arsenal of Braavos can reportedly build a war galley in a day.[5]

Other Places

Ibben makes use of fat-bellied whaling ships with hulls black with tar and people of the Summer Islands use swan ships.

Warfare

Ships are used in small skirmishes, raids, and full-scale naval engagements, such as the Battle of Fair Isle. Lords whose lands abut the coast might need to maintain a few war galleys to defend against piracy. Ships are also use for support roles, such as providing provisions and transporting troops.

The basic tactic of naval battles is to get the ship close enough to ram the other ship, board her, and fight the rest of the battle on the deck. Up until they close longbows and crossbows can be used. Sometimes siege weapons are carried on the largest war galleys.

  • Longships of the Iron Fleet are used as fast raiding ships. They can travel twice as swiftly as a merchant cog[6] and can carry up to 100 men.[7] The standard tactic for engaging is to board the enemy ship. The crew being combatants, as well as the ironborn preference for wearing armor despite the risk of drowning, gives the ironborn an advantage when boarding.
  • War galleys or dromonds are larger than normal galleys and carry more tonnage as a result of being equipped with a ram, and they may equip siege weapons like ballista or catapults. They also have a larger compliment of oarsmen and soldiers onboard. The standard tactic for engaging is to ram the enemy ship, causing it to sink, or to board it if the attacking ship has a greater number of soldiers and wishes to capture the enemy ship intact. They are presumably the kind of ship that George R. R. Martin has compared to Venetian/Byzantine dromonds of war.[3] The standard war galley in Westeros has 100 oars and oarmen, with the larger ships adding more decks of 100 oarsmen. Myrish war galleys appear to have no more than 80 oars.
  • Swan ship are known to have red archers, companies that help defend the vessel from attack. Women serve on swan ships and can command the red archers.[8]

Types of ships - Specifications

Some of the descriptions are based on real world parallels.

  • Galleys, vessels larger than boats, are propelled by sail or oar power. They are used for warfare, trade and piracy. Due to their low setting they are primarily coastal ships, preferring to thread through archipelagos rather than risking even a moderate sea. Their large rower crew makes them maneuverable and swift but also require frequent stops for food and water. The galley has supplemental sails to replace or augment the effort of the rowers, particularly during long journeys. The ability to travel swiftly without regard to the direction or strength of the wind becomes invaluable for daylight expeditions across open water. The real world, practical upper limit for a galley fast and maneuverable enough for warfare was around 25-30 oars per side. By adding another level of oars, the galley could be made shorter with as many rowers, while making them strong enough to be effective ramming weapons. The flagship of House Hightower, Honor of Oldtown, and the flagship of the royal fleet, King Robert's Hammer, are the two largest known galleys in Westeros.
  • Longships are a smaller type of galley primarily used by the ironborn. They are long, narrow, light, wooden boat with a shallow-draft hull designed for speed. The ship's shallow draft allows navigation in waters only one meter deep and permits beach landings, while its light weight enables it to be carried over portages. Longships are also double-ended, the symmetrical bow and stern allowing the ship to reverse direction quickly without having to turn around. This trait proves particularly useful in northern latitudes where icebergs and sea ice pose hazards to navigation. Longships are fitted with oars along almost the entire length of the boat itself. Later versions sport a rectangular sail on a single mast which is used to replace or augment the effort of the rowers, particularly during long journeys. Martin has compared them to Viking longboats.[3]
  • Cogs are mostly propelled by sails, which make them difficult to sail, especially upwind, and they are hostage to breezes and currents in a way that the swift galley is not. However, it can better manage rough seas and its small crew and ample storage space give it greater freedom of movement, making it perfect for trade or equipment transport.
  • Carracks are large ocean-going vessels. They are stable in heavy seas,and roomy enough to carry provisions for long voyages.
  • Swan ships, so called in the Seven Kingdoms for their great white sails and figureheads which are often carved in the shape of birds, are large ocean-going vessels designed and built in the Summer Islands. With a good wind behind them they can outrun any galley. However, they are helpless when becalmed. They have high masts and high forecastles.[9]
  • Whalers are fat-bellied ships with huge hulls black with tar from Ibben used to hunt and process whales in the Shivering Sea.

Recent Events

A Clash of Kings

Victarion Greyjoy leads the Iron Fleet in capturing capturing Moat Cailin.

Stannis Baratheon leads the lords of the narrow sea against King's Landing in the Battle of the Blackwater.

A Feast for Crows

Euron Greyjoy sends the Iron Fleet against the Shield Islands.

The Redwyne fleet assists in the Siege of Dragonstone.

A Dance with Dragons

Victarion leads the Iron Fleet to Slaver's Bay.

Davos Seaworth spots twenty-three war galleys at White Harbor,[10] while Wyman Manderly claims to have as many more hidden up the White Knife.[11]

See Also

References and Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 So Spake Martin: The Lannister fleet (September 26, 1999)
  2. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 16, Bran II.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 So Spake Martin: Re: Greyjoy fleet (February 09, 1999)
  4. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 63, Daenerys V.
  5. A Feast for Crows, Chapter 6, Arya I.
  6. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 11, Theon I.
  7. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 24, Theon II.
  8. A Feast for Crows, Chapter 35, Samwell IV.
  9. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 40, Tyrion IX, Page 527.
  10. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 15, Davos II.
  11. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 29, Davos IV.