
The TONGIAKE was used in the Tonga and central Pacific area.
A double-hulled voyaging canoe; extinct since the late 18th century. Plank built craft with hulls of roughly the same size; connected by a large, heavy platform that rested on washstrakes on each hull and sometimes also on stanchions at each end. On some, the platform sloped upward toward the stern. Hull reported to have been either a narrow oval or hart-shaped in cross section; ribs lashed to cleats inside the irregular strakes.
Rocker bottom; hulls tapered to a sharp point forward and a blunted point aft. Decked at each end; hatches gave access to interiors to permit bailing. Steered with 2-3 oars, each worked by 2 men when seas heavy.
Short mast, vertical or raked forward; some notched to form steps. One type employed a bipod mast with each part stepped in a different hull. Set a triangular mat sail with the apex down; boomed at the foot. Mast stayed in various ways, including shrouds that ran from a long balance spar that crossed the platform abaft the mast and extended well out each side.
Reported lengths 18.2 till 21.3m. Beam 4.5 till 5m.
She were sometimes also named TOGIAKI or TONGIAGI.
Penrhyn 1981 1c sg169, 15c sg189, 1984 8c sg 340
Copied from: Aak to Zumbra, A Dictionary of the World’s Watercraft