The Trabaccoló, Trabaccalo, Trabacalo or Trabakul in Croatian, is a type of Adriatic Sea sailing coaster. The name comes from the word trabacca, which means tent, which in turn recalls the vessel's sails. The trabaccoló was a typical Venetian boat-form that dates back to the first half of the 15th Century and that spread throughout the Adriatic. Built of oak and larch, trabaccolós were slow but reliable cargo vessels ranging between 50 and 200 deadweight tons. They had round bows and sterns, and were wide, compact, and with good stowage. Other characteristics included a large rudder that extended below the depth of the keel, two masts with lug sails and rigging, a bowsprit, and a carved and colorfully painted stern. The usual such vessel was about 20 metres long, with a breadth equal to about a third of the length. Typically a trabaccoló would have a crew of 10 to 20 sailors.
Today, the Marine Museum of Cesenatico (Museo della Marineria di Cesenatico) has a restored, functioning trabaccoló, the Barchet, which participates in sailing events during the summer.
During the late 18th and early 19th Centuries, it was common for trabaccolós to carry some armament in the form of two or three cannons. The vessels were not only prey to pirates and privateers, but also were fair game for naval vessels seeking prizes.
During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, Royal Navy vessels cruising around Italy often captured trabaccolós. The 14-gun cutter HMS Pigmy captured several. On 17 January 1800 she captured the Imperial trabaccolo Divine Providence, which was carrying a cargo of rope from Cesenatico to France. On 18 February 1801, off the island of Lafrina, Pigmy captured Adelaide, a French privateer trabaccoló armed with two 12-pounders and one 6-pounder cannon, and carrying a crew of 51 men. A former fishing vessel, she was under the command of Dominique Cannilla and was seven days out from Ancona. She had taken one small prize. On 15 March, Pigmy encountered yet another trabaccoló off the Isle of Lonzo. Pigmy chased the vessel to the Isle of Molata where the quarry anchored and hoisted French colours. When Pigmy fired a shot, the French vessel struck. She turned out to be the privateer Achille, armed with four 9-pounders and six 2-pounders, and carrying a crew of 44 men. Achille was under the command of Francisco Bruni, had only been out of Ancona for one day, and had made no captures.