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Carrack
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== Origins == [[File:Portuguese Nau.png|thumb|16th-century depiction of a Portuguese ''nau'']] By the [[Late Middle Ages]], the [[Cog (ship)|cog]] and cog-like square-rigged vessels equipped with a [[rudder]] at the [[stern]], were widely used along the coasts of Europe, from the Mediterranean, to the Baltic. Given the conditions of the Mediterranean, [[galley]] type vessels were extensively used there, as were various two masted vessels, including the [[caravel]]s with their lateen sails. These and similar ship types were familiar to Portuguese navigators and shipwrights. As the Portuguese and Spaniards gradually extended their trade ever further south along Africa's Atlantic coast and islands during the 15th century, they needed larger, more durable and more advanced sailing ships for their long oceanic ventures. Gradually, they developed their own models of oceanic carracks from a fusion and modification of aspects of the ship types they knew operating in both the Atlantic and Mediterranean, generalizing their use in the end of the century for inter-oceanic travel with a more advanced form of sail rigging that allowed much improved sailing characteristics in the heavy winds and waves of the Atlantic Ocean and a hull shape and size that permitted larger cargoes. In addition to the average tonnage naus, some naus (carracks) were also built in the reign of [[John II of Portugal]], but were widespread only after the turn of the century. The Portuguese carracks were usually very large ships for their time, often over 1000 tons [[Displacement (ship)|displacement]],<ref>{{cite book |last=Braudel |first=F |title=The Structures of Everyday Life |url=https://archive.org/details/structuresofever01brau |url-access=registration |year=1979 | page=[https://archive.org/details/structuresofever01brau/page/423 423] |publisher=Harper & Row | isbn=0060148454}}</ref> and having the future naus of the [[Portuguese India Armadas|India run]] and of the China and Japan trade, also other new types of design. A typical three-masted carrack such as the [[São Gabriel (ship)|''São Gabriel'']] had six sails: bowsprit, foresail, mainsail, mizzensail and two topsails. [[File:Trading ship in Dubrovnik.JPG|thumb|Replica of ''Dubrovačka karaka'' (Dubrovnik Carrack), used between the 14th and the 17th century for cargo transport in the [[Republic of Ragusa]] (present-day [[Croatia]])]] In the [[Republic of Ragusa]], a kind of a three or four masted carrack called ''Dubrovačka karaka'' (Dubrovnik Carrack) was used between the 14th and the 17th century for cargo transport. In the middle of the 16th century, the first [[galleon]]s were developed from the carrack. The galleon design came to replace that of the carrack although carracks were still in use as late as the middle of the 17th century due to their larger cargo capacity.
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