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Regalskeppet Vasa

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Image:Stockholm ship Vasa.jpg
Vasa from the port side
Career Image:Naval Ensign of Sweden.svg
Laid down: 1626
Launched: August 10 1628
Fate: Sank on her maiden voyage.
General Characteristics
Displacement: 1210 metric ton
Total Length: 69 m (226.3 ft)
Beam: 11.7 m (38.4 ft)
Draft: 4.8 m (15.7 ft)
Height, keel to mast: 52.5 m (172.2 ft)
Propulsion: 10 Sails, 3 Masts
Sail area: 1,275 m2
Armament: 64 guns
Sailors: 145
Soldiers: 300

Regalskeppet Vasa or Wasa (pronounced "shep-et Vah-sah") was a Swedish 64-gun ship of the line, built for King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden of the House of Vasa, in 1626-1628. The Vasa had capsized in the first mile of the maiden voyage on 10 August 1628 (details below). After years of searching and preparation, from 1956, the Vasa was removed from the water on 24 April 1961, and is now on display at the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.

Contents

[edit] Construction

During 1621-1625, the work at the Stockholm shipyard was led by Antonius Monier, with Dutch-born Henrik Hybertsson (alternative spellings are Henrijk Hybertson or Hendrijk Hybertszoon) as hired shipbuilder. On 16 January 1625, Henrik and his brother Arendt Hybertsson de Groote took over the shipyard and soon signed a contract to build four (4) ships, two larger of around 135 feet and two smaller of 108 feet<ref name="sa">Sandström, Anders (1982). Sjöstrid på Wasas tid. Stockholm: Wasastudier, nr 9. ISBN 91-85268-21-6.</ref>.

After a few years, the shipyard ran into economic problems, delaying the construction of the contracted ships. At the same time, the Swedish navy lost 10 ships in a single storm and the king worriedly sent a letter to Admiral Klas Fleming, asking him to make sure that Henrik hurried with the construction of the two smaller ships. Along with the letter were measurements for the ship the King intended, with a 120 foot keel. That gave Henrik Hybertsson new problems, because the measurements given by the king were between the planned larger and smaller vessels and the timber had already been cut. In a new letter, on February 22, 1626, the king yet again demanded his measurements for the new ship be followed. In the end, it seems likely that Henrik extended one of his started designs for a smaller 108 foot ship by adding another section to it, creating the 135 foot ship that would become the Vasa <ref name="cb">Curt, Borgenstan, Sandström, Anders (1984). Sjöstrid på Wasas tid. Stockholm: Wasastudier, nr 12.</ref>.

Henrik Hybertssson never had the chance to see the Vasa completed; he had become ill in late 1625 and, after one year of the construction, died in the spring of 1627. The supervision for the shipbuilding was given to Henrik's assistant, Hein Jaconsson, another Dutch immigrant. In practice, while Henrik was ill, the responsibility was shared between him and his assistant Hein, leading to confusion and a lack of leadership<ref name="cb" />.

While the ship was being equipped, Admiral Fleming ordered the stability of the Vasa to be tested. The standard stability test of the day was thirty sailors running from side to side, assessing the tendency of the boat to rock. When this was attempted on Vasa, the ship started tilting significantly after only three runs and the admiral ordered the test aborted, allegedly stating "had they run any more times, she would have went over". Surprisingly enough, neither Hein Jacobsson nor Johan Isbrandsson, the two ship builders in charge at the time, were present for the stability test. Boatswain Matsson, is said to have uttered "God hope it will stay on its keel" in response to the test<ref name="cb" />.

Shortly after the disaster, Henrik's brother and co-owner Arendt Hybertsson left Sweden and returned to Holland.

[edit] Maiden voyage

On August 10, 1628, Captain Söfring Hansson ordered the Vasa to set sail on her maiden voyage to the harbor of Stockholm. The day was calm, and the only wind was a light breeze from the southwest. Her sails were not set until the southern outskirts of the harbor, but the Vasa sailed for less than a nautical mile before capsizing, once they had been rigged. In the harbor a gust of wind forced the ship onto her port side, after which water started flowing in through her open cannon gun ports. Vasa sank to a depth of 100 feet, around 100 yards from the shore. Despite the short distance to the land, between 30 and 50 people were trapped in the ship and perished. The exact number of casualties is still unknown, as the only reports from the accident are lacking in substance and are incomplete.

[edit] Inquest

When the King heard of Vasa's fate, he was incensed. 'Imprudence and negligence' must have been the cause, he wrote angrily in a letter, demanding in no uncertain terms that the guilty parties be punished. Captain Söfring Hansson who survived the disaster was immediately put in prison, awaiting trial<ref name="louis">Case: The Vasa Capsizes. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-04-06.</ref>.

At the following interrogation, Captain Söfring Hansson simply stated "a gust came". It is known from other reports that there was almost no wind at the time, so it did not take much to sink the ship. It has been calculated that if the Vasa's center of gravity had been a mere 5-10 cm (2-4 inches) lower, she would not have capsized in the harbor. <ref>Borgenstam, Curt and Sandström, Anders. Page 49. </ref>.

In the end, no guilty party could be found. The person responsible for the design, Henrik Hybertsson, was long dead and buried. The ship was built according to the specifications laid out by the King and one couldn't very well punish the King. In the end, no one was punished or found guilty for negligence.

The sinking of the Vasa was also a major economic disaster; the cost of the ship was more than 200 000 riksdaler, which was about 5% of Sweden's GNP at the time<ref name="louis" />.

[edit] Why did the Vasa sink?

During this period, the design requirements and calculations for building a ship only existed in the head of the shipwright. Scientific theories on vessel design or stability had not yet been developed, so important factors like the ship's center of gravity had to be estimated from the builder's experience.<ref name="louis" />

  • The Vasa was a very advanced ship for her time, and much of the design was changed while the ship was being built. The build was delayed and at the end, marked by great hurry to get the ship finished<ref name="cb" />.
  • The original plans only called for one closed gundeck, but the Vasa was finished with two, at the king's request.
  • The Vasa carried insufficient ballast to counter her height. The ship's compliment of 300 soldiers was expected to increase her weight in the water, but at the time of the ship's sinking, they were not yet aboard. The result was increased instability in an already problematic ship.


[edit] Recovery

After its sinking, most of the ship's valuable bronze cannons were soon recovered with the use of a diving bell. Access to the cannons required removing the decking at several levels.

In 1956, Anders Franzén thought of the possibility of recovering wrecks from the Baltic waters, because he figured that these waters were free from the shipworm Teredo navalis. He started looking for the Vasa and found her, in an upright position, at a depth of 32 meters. The wreck was lifted in a relatively straightforward way, by digging six tunnels under the hull, through which steel cables were attached to a pair of lifting pontoons. The ship was lifted and brought to shallower water, where she was to be made watertight for the final lift. Her gun ports were closed by means of temporary lids and all the holes from the iron bolts, which had rusted away, were plugged. The final lift took place on April 24, 1961, after which she was put in a dry dock. Among the items recovered from the ship was a small statue of the Finnish olympic gold-medalist Paavo Nurmi of the 1920s. The finding initially caused a major stir among Swedish marine archeologists as to the origin of the item, and later received significant press attention once it was revealed that a day before the recovery, a team of Finnish students had dived down to the wreck and placed the item on the deck among other artifacts. <ref>Ilta Sanomat Newspaper (5th July 1961). Article. web.archive.com. URL's last accessed October 19 2006.</ref>

Vasa's stern

[edit] Conservation

Conservation of the ship itself was done using polyethylene glycol, a method that was also used years later in the conservation process of the 16th century English ship, the Mary Rose. Vasa was sprayed with this glycol for 17 years, followed by slow drying. Recent developments, however, have shown that this conservation method, in time, makes the wood brittle and fragile.

Over 26,000 artifacts have been found, including six original sails, still folded. After the lifting of the wreck, the wreck site was searched for artifacts and over 700 sculptures were found. These carvings were once attached to the ship, but the bolts had rusted away, causing the sculptures to fall to the bottom.

[edit] Museum

The ship can be seen in the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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cs:Vasa de:Vasa (Schiff) es:Vasa fr:Vasa it:Regalskeppet Vasa hu:Vasa (hajó) nl:Vasa (schip) ja:ヴァーサ (戦列艦) no:Regalskipet Vasa pl:Vasa fi:Vasa (laiva) sv:Regalskeppet Vasa

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