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*''Chinese'': 蜈蚣船 ''(wúgōng chuán)''
 
*''Chinese'': 蜈蚣船 ''(wúgōng chuán)''
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Centipede ships was the term applied to a style of ship built in the [[Ming Dynasty|Ming Empire]] in the 1520s-1530s. The first Chinese ships to incorporate European design elements, they made use of long rows of oar ports, new modes of deploying cannon and other firearms, and cotton lateen sails in combination with traditional Chinese sails, as well as adaptations to the keel and overall form of the ship otherwise, making them more maneuverable and more effective in battle than earlier junks. These proved essential to a number of key Ming victories against European ships in the 1520s-30s.
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Centipede ships was the term applied to a style of ship built in the [[Ming Dynasty|Ming Empire]] in the 1520s-1530s. The first Chinese ships to incorporate European design elements, they were built with the aid of Portuguese shipwrights brought to [[Nanjing]] by the Ming court for that purpose. The result were ships which made use of long rows of oar ports, new modes of deploying cannon and other firearms, and cotton lateen sails in combination with traditional Chinese sails, as well as adaptations to the keel and overall form of the ship otherwise, making them more maneuverable and more effective in battle than earlier junks. These proved essential to a number of key Ming victories against European ships in the 1520s-30s.
    
By [[1534]], the court ordered that no more centipede ships were to be produced. The various innovations of their design, however, were then incorporated into junks built from that time forward, becoming exceptionally standard. [[Chinese investiture envoys|Investiture envoy]] [[Chen Kan]] ordered two such ships constructed for his embassy to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] in 1534, and the Kingdom ordered another six constructed for its use shortly afterward. Junks incorporating these design features became the standard form of junk built and sailed throughout the region - from [[Fuzhou]] and [[Ningbo]] to [[Nagasaki]] and [[Naha]] - for nearly the entire early modern period, from the 1530s until the early-to-mid-19th century.
 
By [[1534]], the court ordered that no more centipede ships were to be produced. The various innovations of their design, however, were then incorporated into junks built from that time forward, becoming exceptionally standard. [[Chinese investiture envoys|Investiture envoy]] [[Chen Kan]] ordered two such ships constructed for his embassy to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] in 1534, and the Kingdom ordered another six constructed for its use shortly afterward. Junks incorporating these design features became the standard form of junk built and sailed throughout the region - from [[Fuzhou]] and [[Ningbo]] to [[Nagasaki]] and [[Naha]] - for nearly the entire early modern period, from the 1530s until the early-to-mid-19th century.
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