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[Image:Dublin_WK_002_02.jpg|thumb|right|600px|The Sea Stallion arrives in [[Dublin]]. Image courtesy Viking Ship Musueum. {{photo|Viking Ship Museum}}] | |||
The '''''Sea Stallion''''', fully titled the ''Sea Stallion of Glendalough'', is a modern-day authentic reconstruction of a 30-metre [[Viking]] [[longship]]. She is modelled on a wreck, the ''Skuldelev 2'', recovered from [[Roskilde]] Fjord in [[Denmark]]. | The '''''Sea Stallion''''', fully titled the ''Sea Stallion of Glendalough'', is a modern-day authentic reconstruction of a 30-metre [[Viking]] [[longship]]. She is modelled on a wreck, the ''Skuldelev 2'', recovered from [[Roskilde]] Fjord in [[Denmark]]. |
Revision as of 10:42, 24 August 2007
[Image:Dublin_WK_002_02.jpg|thumb|right|600px|The Sea Stallion arrives in Dublin. Image courtesy Viking Ship Musueum. Template:Photo]
The Sea Stallion, fully titled the Sea Stallion of Glendalough, is a modern-day authentic reconstruction of a 30-metre Viking longship. She is modelled on a wreck, the Skuldelev 2, recovered from Roskilde Fjord in Denmark.
Skuldelev 2
The original ship was constructed by Vikings settlers in Ireland, around the year 1042 CE, using oak wood from Glendalough in County Wicklow. The ship, along with 4 others, was scuttled some 30 years later in Roskilde Fjord in order to prevent access to the fjord by enemies. The wrecks were discovered in 1962. The Skuldelev 2 is now housed in the Viking Ship Musueum.
A marine archaeology project to build Skuldelev 2's replica, the Sea Stallion of Glendalough, was initiated by the museum. Using authentic materials and building methods, with replica tools, the ship was built between 2000 and 2004. The reconstruction project and its associated voyage aim to shed light on the logistics of Viking shipbuilding, sailing and society.
Voyage
A crew of 65 Danish and Irish volunteers sailed the ship from Denmark to Ireland. It departed from Roskilde on 1st July, 2007, and arrived in Ireland safely, sailing up the River Liffey in Dublin on 14th August, 2007. Their course took them across the North Sea, where they faced force 9 gales and had to be towed for a time, down past Scotland, and through the Irish Sea to Dublin.
The Sea Stallion will be housed on land, at Collins Barracks, until summer 2008, when it will make the return voyage to Denmark.
April Fool
An April Fool hoax press release was issued by the Viking Ship Museum on 1st April, 2007[1]. The press release claimed that due to an EU directive concerning Ireland's "inviolability of the national cultural heritage", the wreck of the Skuldelev 2 would have to be returned to Ireland as it was made from Irish wood.
Sources
External links
- Sea Stallion of Glendalough
- Irish Sea Stallion site
- Boat building in Viking times
- Irish living history during the Viking age