![]() ![]() Thus, we will have get togethers, casual cruises, events, and such like that, but this is not an exclusive club and it's 100% free to join this site! So what are you waiting for? Register now! The most important thing to know about the Michigan FBody Association is that we are NOT a club! The Michigan FBody Association is open to everyone, and is a community. ![]() We are the host of the premiere all-FBody event in the Great Lakes area - the Annual Michigan FBody Meet & Greet Car Show. was created to allow for an easy one-stop place to find out what's going on in Michigan as far as FBody events, to find out what clubs are available in your immediate area, and for an easy place to post classifieds for items you want to sell! Our goal was to create a more close-knit community of FBody enthusiasts in the state of Michigan, and to bring Camaro and Firebird enthusiasts alike together for some amazing FBody events! The Michigan FBody Association is a centralized website for FBody enthusiasts to discuss what's going on in the Michigan area. Welcome to the Michigan FBody Association website. ![]()
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![]() ![]() Route of the Spanish Armada in 1588, up the Channel into the North Sea, North About into the Atlantic and down the west coast of Ireland. English fighting ships relied increasingly on gunnery rather than boarding to defeat an enemy. Lower in the water, with a long prow and much reduced fore and after castles, these sleek ships carried more sophisticated forms of rigging, enabling them to sail closer to the wind, making them faster and more manoeuvrable than the Spanish ships.Įngland had no standing army, so her naval vessels were crewed by sailors alone. Their height and broad beam made these ships awkward to sail.Įnglish captains, particularly John Hawkins and Francis Drake, inspired a new form of ship for the Queen’s Navy, the “race ship”, of which around 25 were built. The main Spanish vessels were galleons, sailing ships that rode high out of the water with towering fore and after castles from which handheld firearms were discharged while the crews grappled the enemy ships so that soldiers could board and capture them. ![]() The ships incorporated by the Spanish in the Armada represented this tradition. ![]() In medieval warfare at sea soldiers added castles to the merchant trading vessel at the front and the rear (fore castle and after castle) and at the top of the mast and fought their fleets as if on land, discharging arrows and handguns, boarding the enemy ships and conducting hand to hand fighting. The Spanish represented the old tradition while the English fought with a new design of warship and new tactics. Ships, organization, tactics and equipment: The descent of the Spanish Armada on England in 1588 ocurred at a time of profound change in sea warfare. Unknown numbers of Dutch vessels harassed and attacked the Armada and hemmed the Duke of Parma’s forces into their harbour of Dunkirk. ![]() The English mobilised up to 200 ships in the Channel. Size of the navies in the Spanish Armada campaign: The Spanish Armada sailed with around 160 ships. Both ships carry the red cross on the white background, the crusader symbol and the symbol of St George Armada, June to September 1588: Lord Howard in the Ark attacks San Martin, flagship of the Duke of Medina Sidonia. ![]() |
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