Short description: Traditional boat built by the Mandar people of Sulawesi, Indonesia
A bago is a traditional boat built by the Mandar people of Sulawesi, Indonesia. The hull is of the pajala-type, lightly built and allowing for shallow displacement. The boat is long, with the mast only making up a quarter of its length. A bago can be readily identified as Mandarese boat by its rudderpost style. Smaller-sized bagos are often used as fishing boats from which fishermen cast their nets. The Mandar people prefer using a bago over an outrigger canoe.[1]
Fishermen at the beach of Galesong, tending to their bago and net. c. 1945–1955.
In the present, small bagos are outfitted with a leti (lete) sail/rig, but not long ago, they had canted rectangular sails (tanja rig). Bigger versions of the bago, also using the pajala-type hull, are sometimes built rather deep and round but without the angle at the end of the keel. These boats can be found all over Mandar coast. A type with nade sail, created the West Sulawesian lambo. Another type, with leti sail and Mandar-style flat-roofed deckhouse, may be mistaken as leti leti. There is not much difference between the two except in the pattern of the placement of the planks and other details that give the characteristics of each manufacturing place of the boat.[1]
See also
- Pinisi
- Palari (boat)
- Padewakang
- Benawa
- Leti leti
- Janggolan
- Lis-alis
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Horridge (2015). p.53.
Further reading
- Horridge, Adrian (2015). Perahu Layar Tradisional Nusantara. Yogyakarta: Penerbit Ombak. An Indonesian translation of Horridge, Adrian (1985). The Prahu: Traditional Sailing Boat of Indonesia, second edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Austronesian ships |
|---|
Ship types |
|---|
| Taiwan | |
|---|
Island Southeast Asia | |
|---|
Island Melanesia | | Admiralty Islands | |
|---|
| Fiji |
- Camakau
- Drua (Wangga tabu)
- Takia
|
|---|
| Green Islands | |
|---|
| Papua New Guinea | |
|---|
| Solomon Islands |
- Binabina
- Lisi (Solima)
- Tepukei
- Tomako (Mon, Ora)
|
|---|
| Tonga |
- Hamatafua
- Kalia
- Pōpao
- Tongiaki
|
|---|
| Vanuatu | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Micronesia | | Caroline Islands | |
|---|
| Kiribati | |
|---|
| Marshall Islands | |
|---|
| Northern Marianas |
- Duding
- Duduli
- Galaideʻ (Agaraide)
- Ladjak
- Lelek
- Panga
- Sakman (Flying proa)
|
|---|
| Palau | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Polynesia | | Cook Islands | |
|---|
| Hawaii | |
|---|
| Marquesas | |
|---|
| New Zealand |
- Waka
- Waka hourua
- Waka taua
- Waka tīwai
|
|---|
| Samoa |
- ʻalia
- Amatasi
- Fautasi
- Laʻau
- Lualua (Foulua)
- Paopao
- Vaʻa
- Vaʻa-alo
- Vaʻa-tele
|
|---|
| Society Islands |
- Ivahah
- Pahi
- Tipairua
- Vaʻa
|
|---|
| Tuvalu | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Madagascar | |
|---|
|
| |
Ship construction & sailing |
|---|
| Rigging |
- Crab claw sail
- Junk rig
- Pinisi rig
- Tanja sail
|
|---|
| Hull |
- Catamaran
- Lashed-lug boat
- Multihull
- Outrigger
- Outrigger boat
- Polynesian multihull terminology
- Proa
- Sewn boat
- Trimaran
|
|---|
| Navigation |
- Hipour
- List of Māori waka
- Makassan contact with Australia
- Māori migration canoes
- Marshall Islands stick chart
- Mau Piailug
- Polynesian navigation
- Rapwi
- Weriyeng
- Yapese navigation
|
|---|
| Trade |
- Austronesian maritime trade network
- Hiri trade cycle
- Kula ring
- Lapita trade network
- Lingling-o
- Maritime Silk Road
- Sa Huynh-Kalanay Interaction Sphere
- Sepik Coast exchange
- Spice trade
- Trepanging
|
|---|
| Other | |
|---|
|
|
Ship replicas |
|---|
| Cook Islands |
- Maire Nui
- Marumaru Atua
- Tākitimu
- Te Au O Tonga
|
|---|
| French Polynesia |
- Faʻafaite i te Ao Māʻohi
- Tahiti Nui
|
|---|
| Guam | |
|---|
| Hawaii |
- Alingano Maisu
- Hawaiʻiloa
- Hikianalia
- Hōkūleʻa
- Hokualakai
- Iosepa
- Makali'i
|
|---|
| Indonesia |
- Alfred Wallace
- Hati Marege
- Nur Al Marege
- Samudra Raksa
- Spirit of Majapahit
|
|---|
| Malaysia | |
|---|
| New Zealand |
- Aotearoa One
- Haunui
- Ngahiraka Mai Tawhiti
- Pūmaiterangi
- Te Aurere
|
|---|
| Philippines |
- Balatik
- Diwata ng Lahi
- Lahi ng Maharlika
- Masawa Hong Butuan
- Sama Tawi-Tawi
- Sarimanok
- Sultan sin Sulu
|
|---|
|
|
- See also:
- Lapita culture
- Domesticated plants and animals of Austronesia
|
Indonesian traditional vessels and sails |
|---|
| Type of sails and rigging |
- Junk sail
- Lete sail
- Nade sail
- Pinisi rig
- Tanja sail
|
|---|
Naval & merchant vessels (by origin date) | | Ancient |
- Borobudur ship
- Cerucuh
- Jong
- Lancang
- Londe
- Perahu
|
|---|
| 14th c. |
- Benawa
- Jongkong
- Kelulus
- Lancaran
- Malangbang
- Pelang
- Tongkang
|
|---|
| 15th c. |
- Ghali
- Ghurab
- Pencalang
- Sampan
|
|---|
| 16th c. |
- Banting
- Juanga
- Kalulis
- Lepa-lepa (dugout canoe)
- Penjajap
|
|---|
| 17th c. |
- Knabat bogolu
- Kora kora
- Kotta mara
- Orembai
- Padewakang
|
|---|
| 18th c. |
- Chialoup
- Jukung tambangan
- Lepa
- Toop
|
|---|
| 19th c. |
- Bajak
- Bangkong
- Golekan
- Janggolan
- Jellore
- Lambo
- Leti leti
- Lis-alis
- Palari
- Sampan panjang
- Solu
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Fishing vessels |
- Bagan
- Bago
- Jukung
- Kakap
- Paduwang
- Pajala
- Mayang
- Patorani
- Sandeq
|
|---|
 | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bago (boat). Read more |