The naumachia (Naval battle between Romans)
by Ulpiano Checa

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The naumachia (Naval battle between Romans)
by Ulpiano Checa
The Greek navy: wanna see some real speed? *sails away at ten miles per hour*
The Lenormant Relief, from the Athenian Acropolis, depicting the rowers of an aphract Athenian trireme, ca. 410 BC. Found in 1852, it is one of the main pictorial testaments to the layout of the trireme.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trireme
This is the later type of aphract trierem. This design had light decking over oarsmen's heads and was used by all nationalities from around 580BC (http://www.rodlangton.com/ancient/desc.htm ).
It is noteworthy that the rowers of the Athenian navy were typically not slaves, but free citizens from the lower classes. Their decisive role in the naval might of Athens and above all in the victory of Salamis gave them prestige and self-confidence with very important political consequences, resulting in the further democratization of the Athenian Constitution.
is this your conversational technique now? you're just going to talk about triremes all the time?"
the truth begins to dawn on my coworker
Dr. William Murray, Mary and Gus Stathis Professor of Greek History at the University of South Florida, is author of The Age of Titans: The Rise and Fall of the Great Hellenistic Navies." His current research centers on warship rams and what they can tell us about warship collisions and the physical reality of naval combat.
Sometime in 481, as the Persian king Xerxes gathered a vast invasion force in western Anatolia, the assembly in Athens debated the proper military response. Themistocles alone argued for the need to use sea power. The Oracle's pronouncement that "a wall of wood alone shall be uncaptured, a boon to you and your children" was a clear reference to their ships' hulls, he argued, and not to some ancient fence around the acropolis. He won the argument that day and Athens bet everything on her fleet, eventually securing a great victory at nearby Salamis (in October 480 BCE). Without control of the sea, Xerxes cut the size of his land force, charged a subordinate with continuing the war, and personally returned to Asia. Although the fighting continued for another year, the lesson was not lost on the first historian of western literature, Herodotus of Halicarnassus. For him, Athens and her new fleet of warships--called triremes--saved Greece. The technological key to victory, then, lay in the trireme, a fearful weapon, which Athens was able to use to great effect, not only against Xerxes, but also in the decades to follow. With it, the Athenians forged an Empire and a flowering of culture that still amaze us. Dr. Larrie Ferriero teaches naval and systems engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology, and is an historian of science, technology and engineering. He is the author of Ships and Science" which explores the birth of scientific ship design during the Scientific Revolution.
The Unread Love Letters of Xerxes: Number XI
For sail: 674 triremes, used once.