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  2. Penteconter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penteconter

    The penteconter (alt. spelling pentekonter, pentaconter, pentecontor or pentekontor; Greek: πεντηκόντερος, pentēkónteros, "fifty-oared" [1]), plural penteconters, was an ancient Greek galley in use since the archaic period. In an alternative meaning, the term was also used for a military commander of fifty men in ancient Greece. [2]

  3. Trireme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trireme

    A trireme (/ ˈ t r aɪ r iː m / TRY-reem; from Latin trirēmis [1] 'with three banks of oars'; cf. Ancient Greek: τριήρης, romanized: triḗrēs [2], lit. 'three-rower') was an ancient vessel and a type of galley that was used by the ancient maritime civilizations of the Mediterranean Sea, especially the Phoenicians, ancient Greeks and ...

  4. Tessarakonteres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tessarakonteres

    Tessarakonteres (Greek: τεσσαρακοντήρης, "forty-rowed"), or simply "forty", was a very large catamaran galley reportedly built in the Hellenistic period by Ptolemy IV Philopator of Egypt. It was described by a number of ancient sources, including a lost work by Callixenus of Rhodes and surviving texts by Athenaeus and Plutarch.

  5. Galley division - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galley_division

    (b) Compute 65×1 = 1. Cross out the 6 of the dividend and above it write a 1. Cross out the 5 of the divisor. The resulting dividend is now read off as the topmost un-crossed digits: 15284. (c) Using the left-hand segment of the resulting dividend we get 15 − 9×1 = 6. Cross out the 1 and 5 and write 6 above. Cross out the 9.

  6. Galley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galley

    The term "galley" originated from a Greek term for a small type of galley and came in use in English from about 1300. It has occasionally been used for unrelated vessels with similar military functions as galley but which were not Mediterranean in origin, such as medieval Scandinavian longships , 16th-century Acehnese ghalis and 18th-century ...

  7. Olympias (trireme) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympias_(trireme)

    Olympias achieved a speed of 9 knots (17 km/h) and was able to perform 180 degree turns within one minute, in an arc no wider than two and a half (2.5) ship-lengths. These results, achieved with an inexperienced, mixed crew, suggest that ancient historians like Thucydides were not exaggerating about the capabilities of triremes.

  8. Bireme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bireme

    A unit commandant (who was given a tent on the open deck) directed a group of marines. The bireme was also recorded in ancient history on the 8th and early 7th-century BC Assyrian reliefs, where they were used to carry out an amphibious attack on the coast of Elam and the lagoons of the Persian Gulf during the reign of Sennacherib. [5]

  9. Greek riddles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_riddles

    Most surviving ancient Greek riddles are in verse. [3] Though there may already have been anthologies of riddles written down in the Hellenistic period, these do not survive. [ 4 ] By far the largest extant collection of Antique Greek riddles is Book 14 of the Greek Anthology , as preserved in Codex Parisianus suppl. Graecus 384, which contains ...