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keelhauling and .
As the hull was usually covered in barnacles and other marine growth, if the offender was pulled quickly, keelhauling would typically result in serious cuts, loss of limbs and even decapitation.
The earliest official mention of keelhauling is a Dutch ordinance of 1560, and the practice was not formally abolished until 1853.
Today, keelhauling can refer to the spinnaker sheets getting stuck under the hull after dousing the sail.
The name of the operation comes from the naval practice of corporal punishment, keelhauling.

ship's and surgeon
With Hudson looking on, his protege Greene picked a fight with the ship's surgeon, Edward Wilson.
* Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels was originally attributed to " Lemuel Gulliver ", a ship's surgeon, and purported to be a factual account of four of his sea voyages.
After qualification he sought adventure as a ship's surgeon, voyaging the Pacific Ocean, taking the opportunity to study local crafts, linguistics, and tropical plants.
Captured by the French and shipwrecked in 1805, he was repatriated and returned to the East India Company's service as ship's surgeon.
* 1842 – Mayer makes a connection between work, heat, and the human metabolism based on his observations of blood made while a ship's surgeon ; he calculates the mechanical equivalent of heat
As ever, Rivers did not allow his drawbacks to dishearten him ", and instead of entering the army his love of travelling lead him to serve several terms as a ship's surgeon, travelling to Japan and North America in 1887.
Tourtellotte was a ship's surgeon in the U. S. Navy during the Civil War.
On board was the botanist Philibert Commerçon, who named the flower Bougainvillea, and his valet, later unmasked by the ship's surgeon as Jeanne Baré, possibly Commerçon's mistress ; she would become the first woman known to circumnavigate the globe.
On leaving the university, he took a position as a ship's surgeon on a ship trading between Scotland and West Africa, choosing this job because it offered the possibility of paying off his bank overdraft faster than any other.
The genus name honors admiral Auguste Bérard ( 1796-1852 ), who was captain of the French corvette Le Rhin ( 1842-1846 ), which brought back the type specimen to France where Duvernoy analyzed it ; the specific name honors Dr. Maurice Arnoux, the ship's surgeon who found the skull of the type specimen on a beach near Akaroa, New Zealand.
By 1793, influenced by the Regius Professor of Natural History, John Walker ( 1731 – 1803 ), Jameson abandoned medicine and the idea of being a ship's surgeon, and focused instead on science, particularly geology and mineralogy.
A chance meeting with Jack Aubrey gains him the position of ship's surgeon aboard HMS Sophie, a fictional brig-rigged sloop-of-war.
His experience as a ship's surgeon resulted in his two-volume Manuel d ' Histoire Naturelle Médicale et de Pharmacologie ( 1833 ), intended as a handbook for all naval surgeons.
But the encounter goes badly and Corbett is killed during the fight, probably, as the ship's surgeon informs Maturin later, by his own oppressed men.
The book is set during the Napoleonic Wars and concerns the adventures of naval commander Jack Aubrey, and his friend, ship's surgeon, naturalist and spy, Stephen Maturin.
* Mr Nathaniel Martin-parson and assistant ship's surgeon
Aubrey spends his time during the voyage teaching the young midshipmen while Maturin is engrossed in dissections of collection of specimens from Desolation Island and New Holland with McLean, the ship's Scottish surgeon and a brilliant anatomical naturalist.
Constitution has to return to Boston to refit and during the voyage Maturin strikes up conversation with a French passenger, Pontet-Canet, and Mr. Evans, the amiable ship's surgeon.
The book opens with Captain Jack Aubrey and his lieutenants Pullings and Mowett aboard, waiting for Jack's friend, and the ship's surgeon, Stephen Maturin to embark.
It was first published by HarperCollins in 1984 and is the tenth book in the Aubrey-Maturin series, concerning the adventures of naval commander Jack Aubrey, and his friend, ship's surgeon, naturalist and spy, Stephen Maturin.
Treason's Harbour is a historical novel by British author Patrick O ' Brian, set during the Napoleonic period, which follows the life of two friends, naval captain Jack Aubrey and his ship's surgeon Stephen Maturin.
It was first published by HarperCollins in 1986 and is the eleventh book in the Aubrey-Maturin series, concerning the adventures of naval commander Jack Aubrey, and his friend, ship's surgeon, naturalist and spy, Stephen Maturin.
It was first published by HarperCollins in 1988 and is the twelfth book in the Aubrey-Maturin series, concerning the adventures of naval commander Jack Aubrey, and his friend, ship's surgeon, naturalist and spy, Stephen Maturin.
The novel features the adventures of naval commander Jack Aubrey, and his friend, ship's surgeon, naturalist and spy, Stephen Maturin.

ship's and admiral
De Winter then summoned the ship's carpenter and ordered him to repair his barge, so that the admiral could transfer command to another ship and continue the battle.
One eighth of the money went to the admiral or commander and chief who signed the ship's written orders ( unless the orders came directly from the Admiralty in London, in which case this eighth also went to the captain ).
During the 18th and 19th centuries, this ship might also have a " captain of the fleet ", who would be ranked between the admiral and the " flag captain " as the ship's " First Captain ", with the " flag captain " as the ship's " Second Captain ".
In the Royal Navy, during the 18th and 19th centuries, an Admiral's flagship might also have a " captain of the fleet ", who would be ranked between the admiral and the ship's captain ( or " flag captain ").

ship's and Jan
Narrowly escaping the ship's destruction, Katarn and Jan use an escape pod to land on Yavin IV.

ship's and |
A ship's lifeboat ( shipboard ) | lifeboat, built of steel, rusting away in the wetlands of Folly Island, South Carolina, United States.
Between them on a garlanded altar, a Ancient Roman units of measurement # Dry measures | modius ( grain measure ), and in the background, a ship's stern.
File: Toscanini on deck. jpg | Arturo Toscanini poses on a ship's deck.
File: Toscanini 4. jpg | Toscanini lifts his hat for the camera on a ship's deck.
The USS Lancaster Eagle | figurehead of USS Lancaster ( 1858 ) | USS Lancaster carved by John Haley Bellamy and on display at The Mariners ' MuseumIt is still common practise for warships to carry ships ' badges, large plaques mounted on the superstructure with a unique design relating to the ship's name or role.
A smooth-bore, cast-iron ship's cannon, from the Grand Turk ( frigate ) | Grand Turk, a replica of a mid-18th century three-masted frigate
Judy ( dog ) | Judy was a ship's dog on both HMS Gnat ( T60 ) | HMS Gnat and HMS Grasshopper ( 1938 ) | HMS Grasshopper.
The recommissioning ceremony for USS New Jersey ( BB-62 ) | USS New Jersey ; President Ronald Reagan attended and Ship commissioning | gave the ship's orders
Normandie Hotel | The Normandie Hotel, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, was inspired by the ocean liner SS Normandie | S. S. Normandie and displays the ship's original sign
The ship's Boatswain | bosun, an Able Seaman ( occupation ) | able seaman ( AB ) day worker, and a Watchstanding | watchstander AB are seen here working aloft aboard a U. S. freighter to maintain cargo Rigging | rigging.

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