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Christopher
Columbus' Santa Maria
Hsitory of the ship
As everyone knows, Christopher Columbus had three ships on his first voyage, the Ni�a, the Pinta,
and the Santa Maria. The flagship Santa Maria had the
nickname La Gallega. It was a nao, which simply means
"ship" in old Spanish; today, we might call
such a ship a carrack. She was fat and slow, designed
for hauling cargo, not for exploration. Some sources say
that the Santa Maria was about 100 tons, meaning that
it could carry 100 toneladas, which were large casks of
wine. There has been much speculation about just how large
such a ship would be; the best current thinking, by Carla
Rahn Philips, puts the length of Santa Maria at 18 meters,
keel length at 12 meters, beam 6 meters, and a depth of
3 meters from keel to deck.
The Santa Maria had
three masts (fore, main, and mizzen), each of which carried
one large sail. The foresail and mainsail were square;
the sail on the mizzen, or rear, mast was a triangular
sail known as a lateen. In addition, the ship carried
a small square sail on the bowsprit, and small topsail
on the mainmast above the mainsail.
The Pinta was captained
by Mart�n Alonso Pinz�n, a leading mariner from the town
of Moguer in Andalucia. Pinta was a caravel, a smaller,
lighter, and faster ship than the tubby Santa Maria. We
don't know much about Pinta, but it probably was about
70 tons. Philips puts the length of Pinta at 17 meters,
keel length 13 meters, beam 5 meters, and depth 2 meters.
She probably had three masts, and most likely carried
sails like those of Santa Maria, except for the topsail,
and perhaps the spritsail.
Smallest of the fleet
was the Ni�a, captained by Vicente A�es Pinz�n, brother
of Mart�n. The Ni�a was another caravel of probably 50
or 60 tons, and started from Spain with lateen sails on
all masts; but she was refitted in the Canary Islands
with square sails on the fore and main masts. Unlike most
ships of the period, Ni�a may have carried four masts,
including a small counter-mizzen at the stern with another
lateen sail. This would have made Ni�a the best of the
three ships at sailing upwind. Philips puts her length
at 15 meters, keel length 12 meters, beam 5 meters, and
depth 2 meters.
Christopher Columbus Santa Maria ship model plans previews