Windward is the direction from which the wind is blowing at the time in question. The side of a ship which is towards the windward is the weather side. If the vessel is heeling under the pressure of the wind, this will be the "higher side".
Leeward is the direction downwind from the point of reference. The side of the ship towards the leeward is its lee side. If the vessel is heeling under the pressure of the wind, this will be the "lower side".
In general, the pronunciation is "looard" and "windard" but that is nowadays, rather old-fashioned. In any case, the pronunciation for the islands of the Lesser Antilles is Leeward and Windward respectively.
In the case of an archipelago, "windward islands" are upwind and "leeward islands" are the downwind ones.
Main article: Sailing
Windward and leeward directions are important factors to consider when sailing a sailing ship, though the terms have largely fallen out of use in favor of "head-to-wind" and "downwind", see points of sail.
For warships during the age of sail, windward and leeward directions were important tactical considerations. A square rigged warship often tried to enter battle from the windward direction (or "hold the weather gauge"), thus gaining an important tactical advantage over the opposing warship – the warship to windward could choose when to engage and when to withdraw, the opposing warship to leeward could often do little but comply without exposing itself unduly. This was particularly important once artillery was introduced to naval warfare. The ships heeled away from the wind so that the leeward vessel was exposing part of her bottom to shot. If damaged between wind and water, she was consequently in danger of sinking when on the other tack. See Spanish Armada.
Nautical terms | Luv und Lee | Lijzijde | Lovart og le | nawietrzny | Barlavento e Sotavento
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"Windward and leeward".
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