Mercator (ship)
Encyclopedia : M : ME : MER : Mercator (ship)
The barquentine Mercator lies at anchor in Ostend, Belgium. She was named after Gerardus Mercator (1512-1594), Flemish cartographer. She was designed by the Antarctic explorer Adrien de Gerlache (1866-1934) as a training ship for the Belgian merchant fleet. She was built in Scotland and launched in 1932.
Technical data:
- length : 78.4 m
- beam : 11.09 m
- draught : 4.5 m
- foremast : 39 m (square-rigged)
- mainmast : 41 m (fore-and-aft-rigged)
- mizzenmast : 40 m (fore-and-aft-rigged)
- 15 sails (4 jibs, 4 foresails, 3 staysails, 2 spankers and 2 gaff topsails)
- Speed : 13 knots (24 km/h)
- Crew : 150
In 1961 she became a floating museum, first in Antwerp, and finally from 1964 in the marina of Ostend, just in front of the city hall.
During all this time, she has become perhaps the best-known ship of Belgium.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
