Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Naniwa Maru

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Name
  
Naniwa Maru 浪華丸

Tonnage
  
90 T

Beam
  
7.4 m

Maiden voyage
  
1999

Length
  
30 m

Height
  
27.50 m

Naniwa Maru wwwyamamotoshunichicom319104mJPG

Naniwa maru no 7 oil products tanker 2015 dec


The Naniwa Maru (浪華丸) is a replica ship of a typical Japanese trader from the Edo period (1603-1868) known as a higaki kaisen. It was built as the main exhibit for the Osaka Maritime Museum, with academic interest which also encouraged sea based testing until it was transferred into the newly built museum.

Contents

Naniwa maru no 21 oil products tanker 2015 aug


History

During the Edo period higaki kaisen ships were used to transport basic materials between Osaka and Edo (now Tokyo), up the coast. Materials transported included cotton, oil, paper and medicines.

Naming

The name Naniwa Maru comes from the ancient name for Osaka - Naniwa, and the usual postfix given to Japanese trading vessels, Maru. The type of ship, higaki kaisen (菱垣廻船), originates in the name of the rhomboid-shaped bamboo gunwales, higaki, which helped keep the goods on deck, and kaisen, or "coastal boat".

Construction

The plans for the ship were drawn up on computer, based on the only remaining original drawings dating back to the Bunka epoch (1804-1817). The ship has a length of 30m, is 27.5m high, with a breadth of 7.4m and weighs 90t.

The ship uses a number of different woods in its construction, just as the original ships would have done. Pine, cedar, Japanese cypress and evergreen oak are all used in the construction of the hull and mast, whilst the sail is a cotton canvas known as a matsuemon-ho and there are old Japanese-style nails such as nuikugi and toshikugi.

Sea trials

Sea trials were conducted in Osaka Bay between 20 July and 1 August 1999, the first sea trials of a replica ship in Japan. These were run under the supervision of Nomoto Kensaku, emeritus professor at Osaka University, and helped confirm theories on the efficacy of the single-mast, square sail design.

References

Naniwa Maru Wikipedia