JAVAANSE FUSTA

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aukepalmhof
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Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:28 am

JAVAANSE FUSTA

Post by aukepalmhof » Sat Oct 19, 2013 8:06 pm

The inscription on the stamp gives “Javaanse Fusta” and the stamp is designed after a drawing made by the Dutchman Jan Huygen van Linschoten in his book when he made a voyage to the Moluccas. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Huyghen_van_Linschoten
The “Javaanse Fusta” as seen on the stamp is original a Portuguese/Spanish design and most probably left behind in the Moluccas when the Portuguese left from there around 1580.
The fusta or fuste (also called foist or galliot) was a narrow, light and fast ship with shallow draft, powered by both oars and sail—in essence a small galley. It typically had 12 to 18 two-man rowing benches on each side, a single mast with a lateen (triangular) sail, and usually carried two or three guns. The sail was used to cruise and save the rowers’ energy, while the oars propelled the ship in and out of harbor and during combat.
The fusta was the favorite ship of the North African corsairs of Salé and the Barbary Coast. Its speed, mobility, capability to move without wind, and its ability to operate in shallow water—crucial for hiding in coastal waters before pouncing on a passing ship—made it ideal for war and piracy. It was mainly with fustas that the Barbarossa brothers, Baba Aruj and Khair ad Din, carried out the Turkish conquest of North Africa and the rescue of Mudéjars and Moriscos from Spain after the fall of Granada, and that they and the other North African corsairs used to wreak terror upon Christian shipping and the islands and coastal areas of the Mediterranean in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Netherlands Antilles 2003 60c sg?, scott?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusta
Attachments
Fusta_by_Jan_Huygen_van_Linschoten.jpg
2003 Javaanse fusta.jpg

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