Guilalo

Guilalo (also spelled gilalo, jilalo, bilalo, or guilálas), were large Tagalog outrigger ships from the Philippines.

[1][2] They were easily identifiable by their two large settee sails made with woven fiber.

They were steered by a central rudder and can be rowed with round-bladed oars.

[3][4][5][6] They ferried passengers and trade goods (like dried fish and fruits) between Manila and Cavite.

[9] They were also sometimes referred to as tafurea (or tarida) in Spanish, due to their similarity in appearance to the Medieval European tafurea, a flat-bottomed sailing ship used to transport horses.

A guilalo in an 1847 painting by José Honorato Lozano