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  1. Grace Dieu was built to a design proposed by William Soper, a burgess of Southampton and Clerk of the King's Ships. She was clinker-built with three planks nailed together along each part of her hull and waterproofed with tar and moss sandwiched between the timbers.

  2. Jul 16, 2018 · The answer is that Barrowe’s mission was ‘to consecrate a certain King’s ship, there newly built, called the Gracedieu’. The Grace Dieu was the last and biggest of four ‘great ships’ constructed for King Henry V of England between 1413 and 1420. ‘Great ship’ was a contemporary type name and these vessels played an important role ...

    • The Ship Was Completed in 1420.
    • The Grace Dieu Was Reduced to Patrolling The Channel
    • Who Was William Soper?
    • 15th Century Documents of The Grace Dieu Exist

    So whilst King Henry V was busy mustering his troops in the fields of Hampshire, preparing for the battle that would become the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, this great ship was being built on the River Hamble close to Bursledon.Click here for a drawing of the Grace Dieu in the National Archive. The sadness is that the need for this great warship ce...

    The furthest this large vessel ever got was the Isle of Wight where its Devon crewmen mutinied. She was then put in reserve and moored in Southampton Water before being brought to the River Hamble in 1434, where her wreck now lies. In January 1439 it is recorded that she was struck by lightening and caught fire. Anything salvageable was taken off a...

    A merchant of Winchester and Southampton, William Soper was a competent and skilled administrator, he was soon given charge over the building up of a fleet of ships for Henry V. Although not officially appointed surveyor or clerk of the King’s ships until 1418, from four years previously he had been occupied at Burlesdon supervising the constructio...

    The accounts kept by William Soper still exist and have been translated and may be available at the Royal Maritime Museum Greenwich or as a book, The Navy of the Lancastrian Kings. Accounts and Inventories of William Soper, Keeper of the King’s Ships 1422-1427, Navy Records Society Vol 123, London 1982

  3. Henry Grace à Dieu, launched in 1514, was an English carrack built in the 16th Century for King Henry VIII.Also known as ‘Great Harry’ she was the first purpose built great ship in the Tudor navy with four masts, a four deck forecastle and a two deck stern castle.

  4. King's Great Ships Trail | Virtual Museum. On the bed of the River Hamble lay the wrecks of some of the world’s most famous medieval vessels, the “great ships” built for King Henry V’s campaign against the French in the Hundred Years War. Among these historically significant treasures is King Henry V’s flagship, the Grace Dieu. Now ...

  5. In 1514, King Henry VIII of England built "Henry Grace a Dieu" ("Henry, the grace of God"), and the man who sailed her was nicknamed "The Great Harry". The Great Harry was laid and built at Woolwich Dockyard on the Thames in London, where King Henry could observe the progress of shipbuilding. She would be a large Karak-type battleship - also ...

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  7. Jan 25, 2019 · The Grace King house gets a price chop Built in 1849, the Greek neoclassical home now asks $2.25M (down from $2.75M) By Missy Wilkinson @missy_wilkinson Updated Aug 21, 2019, 9:57am CDT

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