The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
The new weapon that Rome used to lash ships together was called "the Claw" and was invented by Marcus Agrippa. It had, as the name suggests, a claw-type business end which was attached to secured ropes. It was fired at the opposing ship by means of a catapult of some type and the claw end would stick into the timbers of the target ship. It also had a metal binding a long enough distance from the claw so the enemies could not cut the cable and set themselves free.
there isn't a mermaid on the front haha
The Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Mariawere the ships Columbus sailed west with from Spain.
The Romans invented the Harpax (crow), a gangplank with a beak on the far end, which, when dropped on an opposing ship's deck, locked both together while the Roman infantry ran over it to board the enemy ship.
yes it did because before they used to have small ships to navigate so they built bigger ships like cargo's to go on explorations.
really easy
water acted as a natural barrier before Romes enemies built ships.
With ships not fitted to carry containers on deck they can usually be lashed down in the ships internal holds (if available). If the containers need to be stored on deck lashing points can be welded to the weather deck to facilitate this.
Cannonballs
Ships
modern ships are welded, older ships use rivets to hold the steel together
A group of several ships traveling together is called a convoy.
they used cords to keep their ships together
A fleet of ships is a bunch of ships together to make a aconimy
u-boats
Visibomb gun or the Devastator
A ship is by itself never a weapon, and that also goes for an ironclad ship. The ironclad could only be called a weapon carrier.
They used the longships for battles. The longship was the strongest weapon the Vikings had. The Viking long ships had no front or back, so it was easy to manoeuvre