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Leier Eusa

Technical Data Sheet

Type: Hypothetical seafaring curragh

Date of construction: 1999

Period: Early Middle Ages

Width: 11.7 meters, Length: 2.7 meters

Special feature: Can accommodate "..." people for crossing the English Channel

A Construction Challenge

« It is a challenge, an experience, a creation and a lot of passion, all at once.  We needed to make an 11m long coracle in four months and bring people who didn't know each other together to work. Each brought a history with them. »

 

Those words by Louis Bocquenet in 1999, a year after building Brioc, reminds us both of the risks taken by the sailing monks and of the integration building site where Brioc comes from. Built in the same vein as the Saint Brendan by Tim Severin, Brioc is one of the rare, if not the last Ocean Curragh to be sailing.

The construction technique is inspired straight from texts of the 10th century describing wooden-structured boats covered in hides.

Crédit photo Leier Eusa inconnu.webp
af4e893377844b28f3675873dba629d7.jpg

What is a curragh ?

A curragh is a lightweight boat from the west coast of Ireland.

The Irish researcher Tim Severin, a specialist in reconstructive naval archaeology, had a large curragh made, covered with sewn skins and rigged with two square sails, to embark on a transatlantic journey from Ireland to America, via Iceland, a voyage which was successfully completed.

The shipyard

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