Manchua

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Illustration of a manchua from The Travels of Peter Mundy in Europe and Asia, 1608-1667

Manchua was a type of sailing vessel used from the eastern coast of Africa to the Malabar Coast, the Indian Ocean, and the East Indies.

The manchua was a square-sailed, single-masted, oared vessel, used for cargo transport in the Indian Ocean.[1] It was used both by locals as well as by Portuguese traders. Typically a Malabar vessel, the term was also used for similar large cargo boats of Chinese origin.[2] Traveler Peter Mundy sketched a manchua in his journals and described them as "small vessells of recreation, used by the Portugalls here, as allsoe att Goa, pretty handsome things resembling little Frigatts, Many curiously carved, guilded and painted, with little beake heads."[2]

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