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01-MAY-2007

The Batavia by Geophoto

The Batavia was a Dutch sailing ship built in the 17th century. On its first voyage it ran ashore on a reef at an island near the westcoast of Australia in 1629. There is a very sensational story about what happened to the survivors, but that is not what is important for this picture.

The following text is from the website of Bataviawerf http://www.bataviawerf.nl/en/batavia.html):
In 1985 a start was made with the reconstruction of the Batavia on a shipyard in the Dutch city of Lelystad. Under the guidance of Master-shipbuilder Willem Vos a group of young people worked on this project.
The keynote has been to achieve the most authentic reconstruction by using traditional materials and following the building methods of the day.
In order to reconstruct the Batavia use was made of a number of historical sources, from archives and museums, like building descriptions from the 17th century, prints, paintings etc. Also archaeological evidence, like the shipwrecks of the Vasa in Stockholm and the Batavia in the West-Australian Maritime Museum in Fremantle, Australi', were of great importance.

On 7th of April 1995 Beatrix, Queen of the Netherlands, officially named the ship "Batavia", after which the ship was launched. The Batavia is owned and made accessible to the public by the Batavia Yard.

On the 25th of September 1999 the Batavia had left the Netherlands for more than a year. The ship was taken to Sydney , Australia and was moored near the National Maritime Museum in Sydney.
On 12th June 2001 the Batavia returned to her home port Lelystad near the IJsselmeer, where she can be visited everyday from 10 to 5

Olympus E-300
1/800s f/5.6 at 14.0mm iso100 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time01-May-2007 12:01:39
MakeOlympus
ModelE-300
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length14 mm
Exposure Time1/800 sec
Aperturef/5.6
ISO Equivalent100
Exposure Bias-0.30
White Balance
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Programaperture priority (3)
Focus Distance

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Guest 03-May-2007 11:58
It is definitely a great sight. They're not all 17th or 18th century ships. Most are huge sail boats, used for navy/army training in some countries (indonesia, russia, brasil, france, netherlands, etc...). Along those, you'll find replica boats that have been used in movies, race boats. The common characteristics to all of them is they're quite huge, with at least 2 masts, some with 4 !
Try this link :
www.armada.org/Sailing-ships

Marc
Geophoto 03-May-2007 08:38
Thank you all for your comments.
Marc, all those great ships together must be an awesome sight. Do you actually mean that they gather a lot of rebuilt 17th century ships? That would be really spectacular.
Shirley Haden03-May-2007 06:31
What a lovely ship! It seems like most are painted aren't they? I love the wood and want to just run my hands along it's sides. Very nice!
Guest 03-May-2007 03:28
Perfect shot Geophoto!
Guest 02-May-2007 21:21
"C'est un fameux 3 mats..." here goes a french song; I like those boats. Do you know that, every three years or so, we in Rouen (Normandy) have this massive sail boats exhibition called "armada" ? The next one is in june 2008 : it would be nice to see you there !

Marc