Third rate warship, 74 guns

L2276-001

Third rate warship, 74 guns Long Caption: Scale: Unknown. A contemporary full hull model of a 74-gun two-decker ship of the line (circa 1800), made by French prisoners of war. The model is carved from the solid and decked, equipped with two boats slung by tackles rigged to the end of the main yards. It is also fully rigged and complete with flags flying from all masts, including a royal standard from the top of the main. When French prisoners were held captive in Britain during the Napoleonic Wars, they were kept in a variety of buildings ranging from purpose built prisons to floating hulks moored on rivers. They were given a weekly ration of meat on the bone which after boiling to make broth, the remaining bone was sun dried and bleached, to make it suitable for carving in a variety of craftwork. One of the most popular items made was ship models and were probably made by a team of sailors who each specialized in a certain part of the ship. They would use whatever material they could gather, wood and bone for the hulls, silk, horse and human hair for the rigging, and later some of the more ornate examples were given a copper sheathing below the waterline. These models were bought and sold at the prisons’ weekly 'open' market days where the public were allowed to purchase items made by the inmates. Credit line: © National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London Object: SLR0013 Artist: unknown Date: circa 1800 Medium: wood; bone; cotton; copper; paint Size: Overall: 360 mm x 520 mm x 240 mm Click here to buy a bespoke print of this image.