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History of Ship Design and Construction
Contents:
This website archive contains a collection of material related to the history of Naval Architecture, specifically on methods and practices of ship design and construction. The primary objective has been in providing access to contemporary historical sources, which are often rare and difficult to obtain otherwise, although some secondary, more recent references were included, too. The scope of the collection is intended to be open to information from all relevant periods and regions from antiquity to the modern era throughout the world. The purpose of the archive is to assist in research work dealing with scientific and practical knowledge in the broadest sense in this discipline. In practice the initial nucleus of the collection, as it now stands, has resulted from activities in the context of a workshop held at MPIWG in November 2001 on the subject of "Shipbuilding Practice and Ship Design Methods from the Renaissance to the 18th Century." Thus the material shows a strong orientation toward the remarkable developments in ship design and construction between about AD 1450 and 1800, mainly in mediterranean countries and Western Europe. However, important references from other periods and regions were not excluded and the archive may gradually continue to grow in this broader direction. The archive is subdivided into four categories of material:
Grateful acknowledgments are expressed to the workshop authors and project team, the library staff, and the current ECHO project team, whose untiring efforts have made the compilation and online display of this comprehensive material possible. Special credit goes to David McGee, then a guest scientist at MPIWG and the initial instigator of the extensive bibliography and source collections. Three manuscripts, which are particular relevant for the history of shipbuilding and belonging to the Archive “Giacomo Contarini” could be published thanks to the collaboration of the State Archive of Venice.
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CONTACT IMPRESSUM Last Update: June 2015 |