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A figurehead is a carved wooden decoration, often female or bestiary, found at the prow of ships of the 16th to the 19th century. The practice was introduced with the galleons of the 16th century, although earlier ships had often had some form of bow ornamentation the figurehead as such could not come to be until ships had a head structure on which to place it.
As with the stern ornamentation, the purpose of the figurehead was often to indicate the name of the ship in a non-literate society (albeit in a sometimes very convoluted manner); and always, in the case of naval ships, to demonstrate the wealth and might of the owner. At the height of the Baroque period, some ships of the line boasted gigantic figureheads, weighing several tons and sometimes twinned on both sides of the bowsprit.
A large figurehead, being carved from massive wood and perched on the very foremost tip of the hull, adversely affected the sailing qualities of the ship. This, and cost considerations, led to figureheads' being made dramatically smaller during the 1700s, and in some cases they were abolished altogether around 1800. After the Napoleonic wars they made something of a comeback, but were then often in the form of a small waist-up bust rather than the oversized full figures previously used. The clipper ships of the 1850s and '60s customarily had full figureheads, but these were relatively small and light.
Figureheads as such died out with the sailing ship. Early steamships, however, did sometimes have gilt scroll-work and coats-of-arms at their bows. This practice lasted up until about World War I.
In Germany, Belgium, and Holland, it was once believed that spirits/faeries called Klaboutermannikins (water mannikins) dwellt in the figureheads. The spirit guarded the ship from sickness, rocks, storms, and dangerous winds. If the ship sank, the Klaboutermannikin guided the sailors' souls to the Land of the Dead. To sink without a Klaboutermannikin condemned the sailor's soul to haunt the the sea forever, so Dutch sailors believed.

2006-07-20 03:43:44 · answer #1 · answered by parsonsel 6 · 0 0

No sails cause it will lay doment till somebody strong enough can take hold of that ship..Underneath that red clay mask is someone so feeble that he cant control the ship and he is going to die unless he take the helm and guide it to safety. He doesnt want to die but has to get a grip on life. Ummm good one i have read this one lots.

2016-03-27 00:55:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is there to bring luck to the ship. There is a lot of superstition in sailing, being at sea in general.
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2006-07-20 03:43:27 · answer #3 · answered by Bacchus 5 · 0 0

A figurehead. Have you never heard the Sex Pistols song?

2006-07-20 03:43:35 · answer #4 · answered by Roxy 6 · 0 0

Thats my wife, she wants to come before the boats in my life.

2006-07-20 05:21:28 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

'cos she will ask for directions - we know men don't.....

2006-07-20 03:47:42 · answer #6 · answered by Storm Rider 4 · 0 0

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