Comments on: Roman Mediterranean Shipping http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/ Archaeology of Portus: Exploring the Lost Harbour of Ancient Rome Mon, 29 Oct 2018 16:05:14 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.14 By: David Dykes http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-45801 Mon, 29 Oct 2018 16:05:14 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-45801 Dr. Whitewright,

I am writing to you in regard to the wonderful drawings of Roman ships that are featured in your articles. I produce video programming about Historical Christianity, with primary focus on the first century, CE. Our not for profit foundation produces this programming for use in churches and colleges. Our goal is to promote critical thinking about religion in general and Christianity in particular. In recent years, we have collaborated with the imminent scholar, Dr. John Dominic Crossan in the production of two educational series: 1. The Challenge of Jesus, 18, 15 – 18 minute episodes; and 2. The Challenge of Paul, a series in the same format.
Dr. Crossan’s historical Jesus and historical Paul work focuses on the fact that Christian origins emerged during the period when the Roman Empire was at it’s ascendency. Crossan insists that it is impossible to understand Christian history without beginning with fundamental awareness of the Roman program of religion, war, victory and peace. So, I am writing to inquire about usage of some of you sketches in our Challenge of Paul series. We do charge fees for the programs: roughly $15 per episode or $200 for the complete series complete with online study guides. We take no profits. All proceeds are plowed back into production budgets. Most of the images we use in production we acquire from Creative Commons and
individual images are attributed with Creative Commons licensing. Thank you for your consideration.

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By: S teve Feist http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-45028 Sat, 15 Sep 2018 17:21:07 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-45028 Hi How useful were lamps at night on Roman ships?
Could they be kept from blowing out and were they mobile enought to be practical?

Thanks

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By: Levi Y Liberow http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-43838 Mon, 02 Jul 2018 17:16:46 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-43838 Hi Julian!

I’m working on a historical novelette and came across your illustration of the Roman ship. would I be able to use it as an illustration for my book?

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By: Daniel MacDonald http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-43768 Fri, 15 Jun 2018 15:38:51 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-43768 Good day, I am trying to figure out a ship the that was written about in the book of acts of the bible in the 27 chapter, regarding its size and make, would you know any information on this item of interest.

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By: Dennis James http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-40783 Mon, 22 May 2017 13:41:32 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-40783 Always a very interesting topic with so many dimensions. My main line of research is to find clues as to the construction cost of an average merchant ship of, say, 150 tons, roughly 25 metres. At this point I’ve failed to find specific examples, so am working on the basis of how much an average ship builder would earn per day, the number of workers likely used to build the craft, and the expected length of time required to complete it.
Ad the cost of materials, a difficult evaluation, then make a ballpark estimate, ballasted and launched.
I’m doing this because all avenues have been scoured with only scraps of info.
Anyone out there with some rare titbits?

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By: Don Vincent http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-40019 Mon, 06 Feb 2017 09:48:05 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-40019 Interesting about the flushing. The harbour at West Bay Dorset is regularly flushed by releasing the pent up river Brit through the sluice gates.

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By: Antonio Nombela http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-39999 Tue, 31 Jan 2017 19:59:02 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-39999 When did Romans used rowing boats or sailing?

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By: Michael Baizerman http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-38538 Sat, 02 Jul 2016 12:29:46 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-38538 Thanks Julian. I wonder if large seagoing grain carriers were sailing ships or galleys. Also, whether Roman shipwrights used transitional vessels equipped with sails and rows. I like your book about the rigs in the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean.

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By: Robert Morrell. http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-38496 Thu, 23 Jun 2016 19:21:57 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-38496 Roman shipping appears to be a subject little discussed, yet its role in the empire’s economy was important. Were the merchant ships crewed by slaves and well as none slave labour? Reference had been made earlier to the construction of Trajanic basin and the evidence, or non evidence for slave labour being employed. I found it difficult to accept that they were not widely used for hard manual tasks.

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By: Sandy http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/2014/06/03/roman-mediterranean-shipping/#comment-38495 Thu, 23 Jun 2016 13:26:59 +0000 http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/portus/?p=795#comment-38495 Absence of evidence is never evidence of absence

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