The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

The Autobiography of Phineas PettIt might be supposed that so ancient a craft as that of shipbuilding...
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Author: Pett, Phineas,1570-1647
Format: eBook
Language: English
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The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

Dhs. 48.90 Dhs. 24.44

The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

Dhs. 48.90 Dhs. 24.44
Author: Pett, Phineas,1570-1647
Format: eBook
Language: English

The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

It might be supposed that so ancient a craft as that of shipbuilding would have left some trace in contemporary records of its activities, the methods of its technique, and the personalities of those engaged in it. Yet although references to ships and shipping are frequent in the records of this country from the earliest times, and although the shipwright was a distinct class of workman at least as early as the tenth centuryprobably much earlierno record of the methods in which he set about the design and construction of ships earlier than the end of the sixteenth century appears to have survived. It may be presumed that those of our earlier kings who possessed a navy royal, and did not rely entirely on the support of the Cinque Ports and of the merchant shipping, would include among their servants some skilled man to perform the functions of a master shipwright, and if not to design, at any rate to look to the upkeep of the king's ships and to watch the construction in private yards of those intended for the royal service. But if the Clerk of the Ships, who first comes into notice in the reign of John, had any such subordinate, his existence[xvi] before the end of the reign of Henry V is not known to us. It is, however, possible that, on occasion, this duty was performed by the king's carpenters, whose principal function seems to have been to keep the woodwork of the royal castles in repair. In 1337 forty oaks required in the construction of a galley, then being built at Hull for Edward III under the superintendence of William de la Pole, a prominent merchant of that town, were supplied by the Prior of Blyth, who was directed to hand them over to William de Kelm (Kelham), the king's carpenter (carpentario nostro).[5] The accounts for this galley have not survived, and there is no means of ascertaining whether William de Kelm had anything to do with the actual construction. Another galley and a barge were at the same time being built at Lynn under Thomas and William de Melcheburn. The accounts[6] show that the master carpenter (magister carpentariorum) of the galley was John Kech, who was paid at the rate of sixpence[7] a day and had under him six carpenters at fivepence a day, six 'clynckers' at fourpence, six holders at threepence, and four labourers (servientes) at twopence halfpenny. The master carpenter of the barge was Ralph atte Grene, who received the same rate of pay as Kech. Neither Kech nor Grene appear as the King's servants. In 1421 the 'King's servant' John Hoggekyns, 'master carpenter of the king's ships,' was granted by letters patent a pension of fourpence a day, 'because in labouring long about them he is much shaken and deteriorated in body,' [xvii]and this grant was confirmed in December of the following year on the accession of Henry VI. In 1416-18 Hoggekyns had built the Grace Dieu, 'if not the largest, probably the best equipped ship yet built in England.'[8] ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 51357
Author: Pett, Phineas
Release Date: Mar 4, 2016
Format: eBook
Language: English

Contributors

Editor: Perrin, William Gordon, 1874-

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