Set shelf
When setting board , water board or peel board is called in boat building an increased board .
Historically, the riser probably goes back to the fact that dugouts were enlarged by placing planks on the hull . Settling shelves can already be found on dugouts from Roman times, as evidenced by the finds in Zwammerdam in the Netherlands . Another possibility for this was to split up the dugout canoe lengthways and to enlarge it by adding a wider floor, creating a prahm-like ship . In the medieval Oberland ship type, both the riser and the longitudinal division were used.
See also
literature
- Curt Eichler: From bow to stern . 3. Edition. Klasing Verlag, Bielefeld / Berlin 1954, p. 320.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Maarten Derk de Weerd: Roman ship finds from Zwammerdamm: Lessons from an old excavation . (PDF; 727 kB) In: Skyllis - Zeitschrift für Unterwasserarchäologie , 4, 2001, pp. 96–111.
- ↑ humans and forest - Leaflets for visitors. Spessart Museum , Lohr am Main 1994.