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Category

Four-masted ships

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junk
type of vessel typically of Southeast Asian or East Asian origin
Chinese treasure ship
large wooden vessel commanded by the Chinese admiral Zheng He
Pamir
barque
Sedov
four-masted barque built in 1921
Kruzenshtern
four-masted barque built in 1926
Nippon Maru
ship built in 1930
Spanish ship Juan Sebastián Elcano
schooner, Spanish training ship
Passat
German sailship
Pommern
1903 museum ship in Mariehamn, Åland
Esmeralda
four-masted barquentine tall ship of the Chilean Navy
Djong
thumb|300x300px|Depiction of a three-masted Javanese jong in Banten, by Hieronymus Megiser, 1610
Viking
1906 four-masted barque
Herzogin Cecilie
four-masted barque
Peking
Historic German steel-hulled four-masted barque
Moshulu
Moshulu is a four-masted steel barque, built as Kurt by William Hamilton and Company at Port Glasgow in Scotland in 1904. The largest remaining original windjammer, she is currently a floating restaurant docked in Penn's Landing, Philadelphia.
Q663536
sail-driven oil tanker launched in 1878, scuttled in 2025
Lawhill
Lawhill was a steel-hulled four-masted barque rigged in "jubilee" or "baldheaded" fashion, i.e. without royal sails over the top-gallant sails, active in the early part of the 20th century. Although her career was not especially remarkable, save perhaps for being consistently profitable as a cargo carrier, in the 1930s Richard Cookson went on board and extensively documented ''Lawhill's internals and construction, which was later published in the Anatomy of the Ship'' series.
SS City of Rome
British passenger ship, active 1881–1902
BAP Union
training ship of the Peruvian Navy
K'un-lun po
Ancient sailing ship from Java or Sumatra