Sampan
Template:Short description Template:For Template:Distinguish
A sampan is a relatively flat-bottomed wooden boat found in East, Southeast, and South Asia. It is possibly of Chinese or Austronesian origin.<ref name="manguin2012"/> Some sampans include a small shelter on board and may be used as a permanent habitation on inland waters. The design closely resembles Western hard chine boats like the scow or punt. Sampans are generally used for transportation in coastal areas or rivers and are often used as traditional fishing boats. It is unusual for a sampan to sail far from land, as they do not have the means to survive rough weather.
It is sometimes claimed that the word "sampan" is derived from the Cantonese term sāam báan ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), literally "three planks",<ref>Merriam Webster online dictionary</ref> but this is likely to be a false etymology.<ref>Template:Cite thesis</ref> A possible Austronesian origin of the word has been suggested, as it is attested in an Old Malay inscription from 684 CE.<ref name="manguin2012">Template:Cite book</ref>
Sampans may be propelled by poles, oars (particularly a single, long stern sculling oar called a yuloh (simplified Chinese 摇橹/ traditional Chinese 搖櫓)<ref>"How to Scull a Boat", WOODEN BOAT #100, June 1991.</ref>) or may be fitted with outboard motors.
Sampans are still in use by rural residents of Southeast Asia, particularly in Malaysia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Vietnam.
Malay communities in Southeast Asia also use the term sampan for their boats. Large boats such as sampan panjang, kolek and perahu panjang are used and built by the Malays and Orang Laut living in their coastal villages.
Image galleryEdit
- Indonesian Sampan.jpg
A contemporary sampan comes back from fishing, on the north coast of Java
- Japon-1886-32.jpg
Japanese sampan-like river boat. Dating from before 1886
- Sampan under sunset Hong Kong.jpg
Small sampan still being used for passenger transportation between islands in Hong Kong
- Sampan.jpg
- Boats in Barishal Bangladesh (3).JPG
Bangladeshi fishermen resting in the shade of a sampan in Barishal
See alsoEdit
- Casco (barge), Filipino version of Sampan
- Sampan panjang, Malay boat
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- "Cranks with Planks presents Sampans -n- Yulohs" (via Wayback Machine) (includes excerpt from G.R.G. Worcester's Junks and Sampans of the Yangtse.)
Template:Fishing vessel topics Template:Fisheries and fishingTemplate:Indonesian traditional vessels Template:Austronesian ships Template:Authority control