A chialoup (or chaloup) was a type of sloop used in the East Indies, a combination of western (Dutch) and Nusantaran (Indonesian) technologies and techniques. Many of these "boat-ships" were produced by VOC shipwrights in Rembang and Juwana, where the majority of the workers were local Javanese. Chialoups were used by the Dutch East India Company and private merchant-sailors of western and Nusantaran origin.

Description

The chialoup sail plan mimics that used in sloops, with a combination of square-rigged and fore-and-aft sails. The boats are usually single-decked with one mast, sometimes with an added mizzen mast.: 34  While most such chialoups use a European-style central rudder, some are equipped with two side (quarter) rudders, a characteristic of Nusantaran boats. The length is between 15 and 25 meters, with a cargo bay almost 6 meters long. Depending on the size of the boat, crews run 20 to 40 people, with a typical load capacity of 72 to 144 metric tons. In the syahbandar's (harbourmaster) record of Malacca a chialoup is listed carrying up to 200 tons of cargo and a crew of 75 people. Chialoups on average were armed with 4 cannons, 1 swivel gun, and 7 snaphaunces.

In the era after 1820, chialoups gradually disappeared from the "List of Ships and Sea Vehicles from the East Indies", a periodical published by the colonial government of the Dutch East Indies, and the term chialoup appeared more rarely in newspapers, replaced with kotter, a Dutch word for a type of sloop.: 37 : 434, 444 : 42 

See also

  • Sloop
  • Shallop
  • Kakap
  • Padewakang
  • Pencalang
  • Toop

References

Further reading

  • Ministry of Education and Culture of the Republic of Indonesia. "Layar dan Perahu Tipe Barat". Pinisi.org. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  • Ship types of VOC

Tschiru Fotos Bilder und Stockfotos iStock

Eine Nilgauantilope im Zoo Dortmund. (November 2005) Tierfotos.eu

Nilgauantilope (Boselaphus tragocamelus) im Steckbrief Merkmale

Tibetantilope Fotos IMAGO

M.G.[Wedi] Piliang on LinkedIn Den Haag, 09112023 CHIALOUP