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TRIREME

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Αριθμός γραμμάτων

7

Είναι το παλτοδρόμιο

Όχι

11
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180
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  • The Athenian trireme fleet needed protection from rot, decay and the teredo, so this new source of tar was valuable to them.
  • Other sources include inscriptions, archaeological evidence, and empirical evidence from reconstructions such as the trireme Olympias.
  • As the name implies, the trierarch was responsible for the outfitting and crewing of a trireme, and for commanding it in battle.
  • Other sources include inscriptions, archaeological evidence and empirical evidence from reconstructions such as the trireme Olympias.
  • Other sources include inscriptions, archaeological evidence, and empirical evidence from reconstructions such as the trireme Olympias.
  • Other sources include inscriptions, archaeological evidence, and empirical evidence from reconstructions such as the trireme Olympias.
  • Other museum ships include the Hellenic Navy destroyer HS Velos (D16), the old cable ship Thalis o Milisios (Thales of Miletos) and Olympias, a modern reconstruction of an ancient trireme naval ship.
  • In March 2003, Perle became embroiled in controversy after The New Yorker published an article by Seymour Hersh describing a meeting between Perle, the arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, and Saudi businessman Harb Zuhair, in which Perle allegedly offered to influence American foreign policy in Saudi Arabia in exchange for investment in Trireme.
  • From the 4th century BC on, new types of oared warships appeared in the Mediterranean Sea, superseding the trireme and transforming naval warfare.
  • If a force has been destroyed, the losing general(s) is/are captured by the ultimate winner of the battle, and the loser's triremes destroyed, although the die must be rolled for this to occur in a naval battle, and a trireme can only be attacked after all legions have been destroyed.
  • The next development, the trireme, keeping the length of the bireme, added a tier to the height, the rowers being thus increased to 180.
  • This new ideology of warfare and naval tactics would prove to be prudent to the overall military applications of the Trireme, and soon would become the principal combative strategy of the Greek navy and other navies alike.
  • Trireme oarsmen used leather cushions to slide over their seats, which allowed them to use their leg strength as a modern oarsman does with a sliding seat.
  • During the Peloponnesian War, a trireme crew of 200 rowers was paid a talent for a month's worth of work, one drachma, or 4.
  • That ancient Greek ship is the quadriceps trireme and symbolizes the power of the Phaeacians navy in antiquity.
  • In the battle the flagship of Philip V of Macedon, a very large galley bireme or trireme with ten banks of rowers, accidentally rammed one of her own ships when it strayed across her path, and giving her a powerful blow in the middle of the oarbox, well above the waterline, stuck fast, since the helmsman had been unable in time to check or reverse the ship's momentum.
  • The feud between Miletus and Samos broke out into open strife during the Lelantine War (7th century BC), with which a Samian innovation in Greek naval warfare may be connected, the use of the trireme.
  • The trireme hulls were constructed from planks with closely spaced and pegged mortise and tenon joints.
  • Indeed, just because a ship was designated with a larger type number did not mean it necessarily had or operated all three possible ranks: the quadrireme may have been a simple evolution of a standard trireme, but with two rowers on the top oar; it may also have been a bireme with two men on each oar; or it may just have had a single rank with four men on each single oar.
  • Pertinax and Crispus flee Imperial questioning on Crispus' yacht, but Crispus is killed when the yacht is rammed by a trireme under the authority of Rufus.
  • In other instances, like the burden of outfitting and commanding a trireme, the liturgy functioned more like a mandatory donation (what we would today call a one-time tax), with the prestige of such a position and other elites' social pressure reducing noncompliance.
  • Among the things expected of wealthy Athenians, besides special war taxes and religious obligations, were supporting the production of comic and tragic dramas; paying for choral competitions, dancers, athletic contests, and trireme races; equipping triremes for battle in the war; serving in positions such as trierarch; and paying the eisphora; a tax on the wealth of the very rich—levied only when needed—usually in times of war.
  • More recently, building on the work of D’Souza, Wills and that of John Cheesman and John Daniels, Derek Andrews of consultancy Trireme International has developed Catalysis II, which extends Catalysis to address the key issues of Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).
  • There is a general agreement that the trireme, the primary warship of classical antiquity, evolved from the penteconter via the bireme.
  • On his arrival at Samos he added a Samian trireme to his squadron and sailed to Teos to check on the rebellion there.



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