The galleys were important particularly in the Mediterranean where there is no tide, because they were the only way of getting around when the wind was going the wrong way.
The Vikings.
3-masted Schooners and Viking Long Boats (or any oar powered war ships)
The ships were powered by oars or by the wind, and had one large, square sail, most probably made from wool. leather strips criss-crossed the wool to keep its shape when it was wet. Viking ships also had oars. A steering oar or 'steerboard' was used to steer the ships. it was fastened to the right-hand side of the ship at the stern (back)
The lifeboats were only oar-powered but not designed, or intended, for speed, like crewboats.
The ships were powered by sail and oars. A warship had a crew of a couple of hundred, mostly rowers as the sail was stowed for battle and manoeuvre was under oar power. Ramming was a favourite method of attack and about 180 rowers powered the ships, with a small number of marines. The oarsmen could be armed for forays onto the land. Conditions were grim in the confined space, especially in rough weather, and a sunken ship usually meant a lot of drownings.
they had rounded hulls which could withstand storms and hold varied cargo, and were powered by sail and oar, and were equipped for astral navigation outside coastal waters. In other words, they could operate across seas rather than just coastal-hopping.
Phoenician ships were similar to contemporary ships in that they were primarily made of wood and relied on sails for propulsion. However, Phoenician ships were typically smaller and less advanced in terms of navigation technology compared to contemporary ships. Additionally, Phoenician ships were often equipped with a single square sail, while contemporary ships may have multiple sails and more sophisticated rigging systems.
Yes but it will all be oar powered and your rowers will get tired so don't move to much.
its a sweep oar
The plural of oar is oars.
RAID regattas are usually 2- or 3-day events, using oar and sail configurations on small boats, primarily used for coastal, or near-shore, sailing/rowing.
Nothing, I'm guessing because there both different things only the fact that there are in water.