A Viking ship on Sydney Harbour – Australian National Maritime Museum

Readers may have seen a rather foreign looking bright green double-ended wooden vessel moored under the Anzac bridge at Pyrmont for several years now. On close inspection, there is no mast, an loose deck and oar holes along each side. Although clinker built, it is not your traditional australian wooden sailing vessel. But what is it ?
The Jorgen Jorgensen at Pyrmont Bay, June 2013
The bow and buttocks are identical and rise precipitously, and this is a clue. If you imagine a unmarried mast and spar with a straight sweep, and possibly a draco head carving on the bow, you will get the painting – it is a Viking longship .
well, not a longship technically. It is a reconstruction of the celebrated Gokstad vessel, which was actually a karvi – a ship used by Viking Age chieftains to cruise the Scandanavian coastal waters and rivers. A true longship, used for raiding oversea, would have been much larger, with possibly over 60 oars rather than the 32 on this vessel .
hush, at 23 metres long this karvi could take up to around 70 heavily armed Viking Age warriors for a slip through the norwegian fjords.

Viking
The original Gokstad ship – built around 900, over 1,000 years ago – was recovered from a Viking Age burying mound in the belated nineteenth hundred and is on display at the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo, Norway. A replica, called Viking, was made in Sandefjord, Norway, in 1892 and in 1893 it sailed from Norway to Chicago to the World ’ second columbian Exposition. Captain Magnus Anderson paid high tribute to the seaworthiness of the vessel. After featuring in the World Exposition it languished for many years and is presently being preserved and restored by the Friends of the Viking Ship group in Illinois, USA .
Clare Payne with the Gokstad find at the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo in 2013. Courtesy of ANMM Curator David Payne.
Our vessel – named the Jorgen Jorgensen – was built and launched in Perth in 1987. While it is not a close replica, made with Viking Age tools, using hand forged rivets and norwegian oak trees, it is an evocative reconstruction and when it is in sailing order, will give us a beneficial agreement of the workings and capabilities of a Viking Age vessel .
The ship was named after the danish ‘ explorer ’ Jorgen Jorgenson ( 1780-1841 ) who led a colorful life in colonial Australia in the early on 1800s and then again in the 1830s – transported as a convict to Tasmania .
Since 1987 Jorgen Jorgensen has operated as a charter vessel but the concluding few years had seen it pine away. Since 2008 the restoration of the vessel has been part of a community outreach plan driven by the Pyrmont Heritage Boating Club, who operate equitable along the seaport from the museum .
Museum Fleet staff inspect the Jorgen Jorgensen
The Pyrmont Heritage Boating Club was established in 2005 with the deputation to ‘ revive inner city boat, engage youth in inheritance, community and nautical industry and to provide community access to harbour culture. ’
The clubhouse ’ randomness ‘ Longship Project ’ engages long term unemployed, disable and deprived people in restoring the vessel – one of only four know reconstructions of the Gokstad embark – to an authentic voyage condition. The project aims to operate the vessel as a mentor, sail-cadetship and leadership train enterprise for the local community. The Pyrmont Heritage Boating Club works with schools, colleges, young mentoring programs, Job-Search and TAFE outreach train and is building a project that will ‘ unite skill-acquisition with creative pride, physical exhilaration and a connection to the environment of Sydney Harbour. ’
Working on the vessel at Noakes Shipyards
The australian National Maritime Museum has established a collaboration with the Pyrmont Heritage Boating Club to assist in completing much needed restoration and major exploit on the vessel. A mast will be stepped and a cradle installed on the pack of cards so it can be easily raised and lowered, one of the features of Viking Age vessels. With the help of the museum ’ s Fleet staff and volunteers, the ship will be painted and major work conducted above and below the waterline. A sail, rigging, oars, sea-chests for rowing seats and shields lining the gunwales will complete the mental picture and this reconstruction of the Gokstad vessel will be the centre-piece of the exhibition opening ceremony. It will be on display for inspection at the museum wharves.

In fact, from September this year Darling Harbour will be the home for three Viking Age boats with the arrival of the exhibition Vikings – beyond the legend at the australian National Maritime Museum. The exhibition includes two smaller vessels that are highly authentic reconstructions of Viking Age finds. Along with the Jorgen Jorgensen they will show some of the diverseness of Viking Age vessels .
The Krampmacken is 8 metres in length and was designed for both the Baltic ocean and the riverways of Eastern Europe. It has a large, braided square sail, three rowing stations and can take a gang of 10 to 11. It was constructed in the early 1980s and in 1983 was sailed and rowed from Gotland in Sweden to Istanbul ( or Miklagard as the Norse called this great city ) in Turkey, showing just how the Scandanavians managed to travel to the Near East at the acme of the Viking Age ( circa 750 to 1100 ) .
Both these replica vessels are depart of the exhibition developed by the swedish History Museum, Stockholm in partnership with MuseumsPartner, Austria and coming to the museum from September 19th 2013 .
Stay tuned to this blog to find out more about the longship stick out and to see regular progress updates on getting a Viking Age vessel transport shape !
Stephen Gapps
curator

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