Image of a wall from a book of drawings and drawings compiled by P. A. Bogoslavsky for a book on merchant shipbuilding in Russia [1]
Slaughtering or raining is a small river sailing and rowing boat, which was widespread in the European part of the Russian Empire until the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th centuries.
She carried a removable mast with a sprint sail and 2-4 rowers [2] . Aspen, pine or spruce timber was usually used as the material for the construction of the waterfront; its cost was estimated at 8 rubles with silver according to the data for 1865. The origin of the name is associated with the process of stuffing a pine belt to increase the side height [3] .
Notes
- ↑ Drawings and drawings of ships, 1859 , p. eleven.
- ↑ Pavlyuchenko, Gundobin, Turmov, 1992 , p. 139.
- ↑ Materials for geography and statistics of Russia, 1862 , p. 84-85.
Literature
- Yu. N. Pavlyuchenko, A.A. Gundobin, G.P. Turmov. Slaughter // Architecture of ships and ships. Brief marine dictionary. - Vladivostok : Publishing House of the Far Eastern University, 1992. - S. 139. - ISBN 5-7444-0120-2 .
- Naboyne // Materials for geography and statistics of Russia, collected by officers of the General Staff. Arkhangelsk province / N. Kozlov. - SPb. : General Directorate of the General Staff, 1865. - S. 84-85. - 342 p.
- Bogoslavsky P. A. About merchant shipbuilding in Russia, river and coastal. - St. Petersburg: Printing house of the Ministry of the Sea, 1859. - 197 p.
- Bogoslavsky P. A. Drawings and drawings of ships compiled by P. Bogoslavsky for a book on merchant shipbuilding in Russia. - St. Petersburg: Printing house of the Ministry of the Sea, 1859. - 28 p.