A baghlah, bagala, bugala or baggala (Arabic: بغلة) is a large deep-sea dhow, a traditional Arabic sailing vessel.[1][2] The name "baghla" means "mule" in the Arabic language.
^Clifford W. Hawkins, The dhow: an illustrated history of the dhow and its world
^Cite error: The named reference Sulivan 1873 p. 102 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
A baghlah, bagala, bugala or baggala (Arabic: بغلة) is a large deep-sea dhow, a traditional Arabic sailing vessel. The name "baghla" means "mule" in the...
the main mast. The ghanjah is often difficult to distinguish from the baghlah, a similar type of dhow. Besides the trefoil-shaped carving on top of the...
determines latitude by finding the angle of the Pole Star above the horizon. Baghlah (بغلة) – from the Arabic language word for "mule". A heavy ship, the traditional...
Mughal Bengal's baghlah was a type of ship widely used by Dutch traders in the Indian Ocean, the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal, the Strait of Malacca...
clan of the Jawoyn people of northern Australia Bágala, a town in Panama Baghlah, also spelt bagala, a type of Arab sailing dhow Bagala, a social group...
game. Oceans portal Medieval ships Chinese junk ship Javanese jong Arabs baghlah Portuguese India Armadas Konstam, A. (2002). The History of Shipwrecks...
Zinat al Bihaar Port Qaboos, Muttrah Oman large sailing yacht (Royal Baghlah) 1004572 Delivered 1988 Smaller Vessels Al Murrih Luxury short haul coastal...
Maldives, based on rice and cowry shells, was probably done on Arab-style baghlah ships. Chinese accounts point to Bengali ships being prominent in Southeast...
world, shipbuilding thrived at Basra and Alexandria. The dhow, felucca, baghlah, and the sambuk became symbols of successful maritime trade around the...
bow. The wide stern of the average Patamar is somewhat similar to the Baghlah, Sambuk and Kotiya but without a poop deck, which is replaced by a bamboo...
some 4,000 dhows ranging from the regular sambuk to the larger boum and baghlah would set out from the many ports of the Persian Gulf. Each carried a master...
Maldives, based on rice and cowry shells, was probably done on Arab-style baghlah ships. The Chinese Muslim envoy Ma Huan wrote about a flourishing shipbuilding...
adjustments in order to suit the goals of global trade of this time period. The baghlah allowed for greater range as it was a dhow scaled up to include a greater...