
Vasa (ship) - Wikipedia
Vasa (previously Wasa) (Swedish pronunciation: [²vɑːsa] ⓘ) is a Swedish warship built between 1626 and 1628. The ship sank after sailing roughly 1,300 m (1,400 yd) into her maiden voyage …
The Bizarre Story of ‘Vasa,’ the Ship That Keeps On Giving
2017年8月10日 · Vasa was the world’s most high-tech warship when it set sail. Today, it’s a resource for naval historians and archaeologists–and a cautionary tale for those who seek to …
Vasa Naval Architecture Research Project - Institute of Nautical ...
The design of a Dutch vessel, consequently, existed almost entirely in the mind of the shipwright. To determine how Vasa was conceived and designed, a process is used termed “reverse …
The Vasa story - Britannia Naval Research Association
Vasa is said to be the world’s best-preserved 17th-century ship. In 2019 the museum had 1.53 million visitors, an all-time high, whilst 2023 saw 1.25 million visitors, a post- pandemic high.
The Vasa Capsizes - Carnegie Mellon University
She was a "royal ship," the biggest, most powerful, expensive and richly ornamented vessel ever built for the Swedish navy, and likely any other navy, at the time. With 64 guns this massive …
Timeline - Vasamuseet
2019年10月18日 · The king´s newest and most powerful ship, Vasa, is launched in the spring and hundreds of craftsmen work through the summer to finish the hull and rigging. When …
The Naval Architecture of Vasa, a 17th-Century Swedish Warship
The Swedish warship Vasa sank in Stockholm harbor after sailing less than one nautical mile (1.85 km) on its maiden voyage in 1628. The hull was raised in 1961, and after a lengthy …
The Warship Vasa – Part 1 - Shipwrecks and Submerged Worlds
2016年2月15日 · Divers explored the wreck and, thanks to the Baltic’s cold and fresh water which makes it inhospitable for shipworms, encountered Vasa in astonishing condition. When it was …
Who built the ship? - Vasamuseet
Vasa was ordered by King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in 1625–1626. It took about two years to build the ship at Skeppsgården, the place that is now called Blasieholmen, in Stockholm. …
Vasa – The ship and museum • Mares - Scuba Diving Blog
On April 24,th 1961, exactly 333 years after it sank, the Swedish warship Vasa surfaced once again. It was a great diving endeavour, however, the real battle was yet to come… After more …