He was hired by the Enlish Royal Navy in part to build the submarine, but primarily to build explosive devices for use against other ships. The English never took his submarine seriously as a combat weapon. Drebbel built the submarine using the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne.
He invented the submarine, something like an underwater boat, if you don't know what it is. John Philip Holland developed the first submarine to be formally commissioned by the U.S. Navy, and the first Royal Navy submarine, the Holland.
John P. Holland, an Irish engineer, is credited with developing the first practical modern submarine. He launched the Holland VI in 1897, which was the first submarine to be commissioned by the U.S. Navy in 1900. Holland's designs laid the foundation for future submarine technology.
Bushnell developed and built the Turtle in 1775 in Old Saybrook, Connecticut.
It wasn't invented until the 1860's so it didn't change the Renaissance since it didn't exist. Da Vinci did think of one to invent, but that is about as far as it got.
No. Ben Franklin did not invent water skies, but he did invent swim fins.
Cornelius Drebbel did not actually invent the submarine. He was the first person to manufacture a workable submarine, but he used the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne. Drebbel built his submarine using a wooden frame tightly wrapped with waterproof leather.Cornelius Drebbel did not actually invent the submarine. He was the first person to manufacture a workable submarine, but he used the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne. Drebbel built his submarine using a wooden frame tightly wrapped with waterproof leather.
The first navigable submarine was built by Cornelius Drebbel in 1620 using the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne.
Drebbel did not actually invent the submarine. He constructed the first workable submarine using the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne. He was born in 1572 in Alkmaar Netherlands. He also was a philosopher and physicist.
Drebbel, Cornelius Jacobszoon, 1572-1634, Dutch inventor, physicist, and mechanician. His major inventions were an atmospherically driven clock and the first navigable submarine; the first voyage was in 1620 in the River Thames, London. His other inventions include thermostats used to make self-regulating ovens and a working thermometer, as well as various optical instruments including the first microscope He also discovered a process for making scarlet dye that was used for many years by his children in the dye industry.Drebbel did not actually invent the submarine. He constructed the first workable submarine using the 1578 plans of English mathematician William Bourne.Cornelius van drebbel is an inventor who invented the submarine. He was born in 1572 in Alkmaar Netherlands. He also was a philosopher and physicist.
submarine and steamboat
No
submarine and steamboat
submarine
The submarine
Bushnell didn't invent the submarine - Bushnell was responsible for creating the first American submarine (the Turtle) and the first submarine used in combat, but long after others had designed and built a working model.Credit for the invention of the submarine is given to William Bourne, a British mathematician and ex-Royal Navy gunner who published a design in 1578. The first navigable submarine for which reliable construction data exists was built from Bourne's design in 1620 by Cornelius Jacobszoon Drebbel, a Dutch inventor working for British King James I.The first submarine credited with a wartime sinking is the Confederate Army vessel H.L. Hunley (it was never a commissioned Naval warship), which sank the Union blockade ship USS Housatonic in Charleston Harbor in 1864. Recent findings by those working on the Hunley (raised intact several years ago) shows that the crew didn't die from flooding damage caused by its Spar Torpedo as has long been believed, but rather by a lack of oxygen. Had they made it to shore, it likely would've altered the course of the war.
Bushnell didn't invent the submarine - Bushnell was responsible for creating the first American submarine (the Turtle) and the first submarine used in combat, but long after others had designed and built a working model.Credit for the invention of the submarine is given to William Bourne, a British mathematician and ex-Royal Navy gunner who published a design in 1578. The first navigable submarine for which reliable construction data exists was built from Bourne's design in 1620 by Cornelius Jacobszoon Drebbel, a Dutch inventor working for British King James I.The first submarine credited with a wartime sinking is the Confederate Army vessel H.L. Hunley (it was never a commissioned Naval warship), which sank the Union blockade ship USS Housatonic in Charleston Harbor in 1864. Recent findings by those working on the Hunley (raised intact several years ago) shows that the crew didn't die from flooding damage caused by its Spar Torpedo as has long been believed, but rather by a lack of oxygen. Had they made it to shore, it likely would've altered the course of the war.
To go under the water and they got the idea by fisfes.