1 - 20
Next
- Mariner, William, 1791-1853, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge for The Hakluyt Society, London, 2022
- Description
- Book — lxxxvii, 464 pages : illustrations, genealogical tables, maps, music ; 26 cm
- Summary
-
"John Martin (1789-1869) was a London-based, Edinburgh-educated physician interested in anthropological matters. This is his only book. He was inspired to write it by a chance encounter with its subject, William Mariner (1791-1853) who spent four years (1806-1810) in Tonga, in the South Pacific, one of the earliest European residents at a time before European influence disturbance or modification society. Mariner, an extraordinarily mature and perceptive youth, became thoroughly imbued with Tongan language and culture as the adopted son of the most powerful chief in Tonga. Thanks to Martin's intelligent engagement with Mariner resulted in a compelling narrative and a comprehensive account of Tongan society which became a classic. Often celebrated as an extraordinary real-life adventure story, it is a pioneering work of anthropology, and for 200 years it has been a primary and authoritative source for research into Tongan history and culture"-- Provided by publisher
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3 NO.41 | Available |
2. English travellers to Venice, 1450-1600 [2022]
- London ; New York, NY : Routledge, for the Hakluyt Society, 2022
- Description
- Book — xxxiv, 433 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps, portraits ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- PART 1: INTRODUCTION / 1. Early Modern Anglo-Venetian Contacts / 2. English Travellers to Venice 1450-1548 / 3. English Travellers to Venice 1548-1600 / 4. Giacomo Franco's Engravings of Venice / 5. Maps of Venice /
- PART 2: ENGLISH TRAVELLERS TO VENICE 1450-1600 / 1. c.1454 'The Physician's Handbook' of Richard 'Esty' or Richard 'of Lincoln' / 2. 1458/1462 The 'Itineraries' of William Wey / 3. 1458 and 1460 John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester / 4. c.mid-1460s-c. early 1470s Sir Edmund Wighton / 5. c.1492/93-97 Thomas Linacre / 6. c.1498/1500 Informacon for pylgrymes unto the holy londe / 7. 1506 Sir Richard Guildford's chaplain, Thomas Larke / 8. c.1511-14 The Pylgrymage of Master Robert Langton / 9. 1513 Sir Thomas Newport and Sir Thomas Sheffield / 10. 1517 Sir Richard Torkington / 11. c.1521-c.1526, 1532-6 Reginald Pole / 12. c.1520s-1550 Edmund (Sigismund) Harvell / 13. 1527 Thomas Wyatt and Sir John Russell / 14. c.1538-42 Andrew Bo(o)rde / 15. 1545 The sinking of the Mary Rose and Venetian salvage attempts / 16. 1545/48 The Historie of Italie by William Thomas / 17. 1548/1550 and 1554/55 Sir Thomas Hoby and the Protestant English community at Venice and Padua / 18. 1550-56 Peter Vannes (Pietro Vanni of Lucca), English Ambassador to Venice / 19. 1552 Roger Ascham / 20. 1564 Richard Smith's account of Sir Edward Unton's visit to Venice / 21. 1570 and 1589 Henry Cavendish / 22. 1573-4 Philip Sidney at Venice, with Griffin Madox, Harry Whyte, John Fisher, Thomas Coningsby, Lodowick Bryskett and Edward Lord Windsor / 23. 1575-6 Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford / 24. 1575/77 Sir John North and his servant Hugh Lochard / 25. c.1575 Sir Henry Unton / 26. 1580 James Crichton / 27. 1581 Arthur Throckmorton / 28. 1581 Laurence Aldersey / 29. 1587/88 Stephen Powle / 30. Venetian intelligence about the Spanish Armada in 1588 / 31. 1588 Edward Webbe (1553/54-after 1592) / 32. 1591 Sir Henry Wotton / 33. 1593-5, 1596, 1597 Fynes Moryson / 34. 1595 Henry Piers / 35. English attitudes to Venice by 1600 / APPENDIX: Venetian Locations, Institutions and Ceremonies.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3 NO.39 | Available |
3. The Levant voyage of the Blackham Galley (1696-1698) : the sea journal of John Looker ship's surgeon [2022]
- Looker, John, 1670?-1715, author.
- London ; New York : Routledge for the Hakluyt Society, 2022
- Description
- Book — xvi, 248 pages, 16 pages of plates : illustrations (some color), facsimiles (some color), maps ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- List of Maps and Illustrations / Preface and Acknowledgements / List of Abbreviations / INTRODUCTION / 1. The Author and his Manuscript / a: John Looker: the man behind the 'Journall' / b: Looker's 'Journall': an Example of Artisanal Autobiography / c: Looker's 'Journall': the Provenance of National Maritime Museum MS PHB/6 / 2. The Early History of the Blackham Galley / a: Construction and Purchase / b. The Blackham Galley's First Voyage (1694-6) / 3. Looker's Journey on the Blackham Galley (1696-1698) / a: The Outward Voyage: Gravesend to Messina, Smyrna and Istanbul: 12th December 1696 to 20th April 1697 / b: Privateering and Detention in Smyrna: 20th April 1697 to 2nd January 1698 / c: The Return Voyage: Smyrna to Messina, Malaga, and the Thames
- 2nd January-14th March 1698 / 4. Understanding Looker's 'Journall' / a: John Looker as a Tourist / b: Risks and Dangers of the English Levant Trade / c: Consuls' roles and the Ottoman interdict / d: Social Relations on board the Blackham Galley / e: Health, Sickness and Death on board / 5. The End of the Blackham Galley / 6. Editorial Conventions Adopted in the Transcription of Looker's Journal / THE 'JOURNALL' OF JOHN LOOKER, SHIP'S SURGEON / APPENDICES / 1. Lord Paget, the Ottomans, and the Detention of the Blackham Galley / 2. Identified Members of the Company of the Blackham Galley under Captain Charles Newnam / 3. Wills of Members of the Crew of the Blackham Galley /4. The Homeward Lading of the Blackham Galley, 13th May-29th December 1697 as Recorded in John Looker's Journall / 5. Documents on the Appraisal and Sale of the Blackham Galley, London, February 1699 / 6. The will, drawn up on 8 Feb. 1714/5 (OS), of John Looker, surgeon, who died at Bath 23 May 1715 / BIBLIOGRAPHY / INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.40 | Available |
- Historia general y natural de las Indias. Libro 20. Selections. English
- Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, Gonzalo, 1478-1557, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge for the Hakluyt Society, 2021
- Description
- Book — xix, 194 pages : maps ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- INTRODUCTION
- 1. The Spice Trade
- 2. The Moluccas at the Time of the Arrival of the Europeans
- 3. Portugal Challenges the Muslim Monopoly
- 4. Spain Challenges the Portuguese Spice Monopoly
- 5. Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes's General and Natural History
- 6. Book XX of the Second Part of the General History of the Indies: written by Captain Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes
- 7. Oviedo's source: Andres de Urdaneta
- 8. The Loaysa Expedition to the Spicelands: the Events of the Voyage
- 9. The Years spent by the Spanish survivors in the Moluccas
- 10. Urdaneta and the Tornaviaje, 1565
- 11. The Significance of the Loaysa Expedition
- 12. This Translation
- BOOK XX OF THE SECOND PART OF THE GENERAL HISTORY OF THE INDIES, WRITTEN BY CAPTAIN GONZALO FERNANDEZ DE OVIEDO Y VALDES, WARDEN OF THE FORTRESS AND PORT OF SANTO DOMINGO OF THE ISLAND OF HISPANIOLA, AND HIS MAJESTY'S CHRONICLER
- General Prologue
- Prologue
- CHAPTER
- V. Which treats of the second and infelicitous voyage to the Spicelands, with the second armada that the Emperor, our lord, sent there in the second discovery commanded by Captain-General Fray Garcia Jofre de Loaysa, Knight of the Order of Rhodes, citizen of Ciudad Real
- VI. How Captain-General Fray Garcia Jofre de Loaysa rejoined the other ships of the armada, and of other events that happened to them, and of the giants and people of the Strait of Magellanes to whom Magellanes gave the name Patagones
- VII. What happened to the cleric Don Joan de Areyzaga among the giant Patagones, and of the continuation of their journey in search of the ships of the armada
- VIII. Of some particulars of the people called the giants, and of the birds, fish and other things that those of this armada observed
- IX. Continuing the journey of the armada that went with Commander Fray Garcia de Loaysa, and of some particulars of the river and harbour of Santa Cruz and of that land
- X. Of some particulars of the river of San Alfonso where he had been before, as reported in Chapter IV, and how the armada returned to the Strait of Fernando Magallanes
- XI. Of some particulars of the famous Strait of Ferdinand Magellanes
- XII. Of what happened to Captain Sanctiago de Guevara and to Chaplain Don Juan de Areyzaga and the other Spaniards aboard the pinnace Santiago in their journey beyond the Strait
- XIII. In which is the conclusion of the account of the cleric Don Juan de Areyzaga
- XIV. Of the Strait of Magallanes, its length and width, its notable parts, the giants that inhabit it and other particulars.
- XV. How the third captain-general named Salazar died, and Martin Iniquez de Carquizano was elected to fill the position and continued the voyage to the Maluco-- how they came upon a rich island called Vendanao and what happened to them there
- XVI. How they discovered the Ladrones Islands and came upon a Christian Spaniard who had sailed in the first armada with Captain Ferdinand Magellan
- XVII. How the third captain-general named Salazar died, and Martin Iniquez de Carquizano was elected to fill the position and continued the voyage to the Maluco-- how they came upon a rich island called Vendanao and what happened to them there
- XVIII. Which treats of the province of Cebu and of the trade there with Chinese merchants and in the other islands of the Celebes archipelago, and of the voyage of this flagship
- XIX. Of the embassy that Captain Martin Iniguez de Carquizano sent to the kings of Tidore and of Gilolo-- and of the gracious responses and good will the emissaries received from those kings and how pleased they were at the arrival of those Castilians at their lands
- XX. How the Emperor's captain determined to go see the kings of Tidore and Gilolo and departed in his ship accompanied by their emissaries in their paraos-- how on the way he was given a letter from the captain-general of the king of Portugal and his response to it
- XXI. How the Portuguese went to fight the Castilians at Tidore with many more people than the soldiers of the Emperor-- how the ones and the others fared in this encounter-- and how the Portuguese returned badly damaged to their fortress of Ternate
- XXII. How Captain Martin Iniguez sent a parao to determine if the two ships they saw sailing were of the armada or not-- and how those who set out on this mission captured two paraos at sea and burned a town on the island of Motil that the Portuguese held
- XXIII. How the general sent Captain Urdaneta to search for the ships they had sighted from Camafo-- and how he burned down a town on an island and killed or captured its inhabitants-- and how he came upon eight paraos with Portuguese on board
- XXIV. How Captain-General Martin Iniguez ordered a galleon built to send to Spain because the flagship was no longer seaworthy-- how two paraos of Portuguese came and the Spaniards sallied forth against them
- XXV. Which treats of the arrival of Don Jorge de Meneses in India and of the subsequent differences and wars between the Portuguese and the Castilians-- and how the parties agreed to a truce which was broken by the Portuguese
- XXVI. How Fernando de la Torre was elected captain-general on the death of Martin Iniguez-- how the fusta the Castilians were building in Gilolo was destroyed by a fire secretly set by the Portuguese-- how a principal gentleman of Tidore was killed for sleeping with the queen-- and of other things pertinent to the history
- XXVII. How Quichilhumar, governor of Machian, abandoned the Portuguese and passed over to the Castilian side and how the Portuguese destroyed the city of Machian by means of an Indian traitor-- and of the intervention of the Portuguese and Castilians in support of their allies
- XXVIII. How, at the Emperor's command, the governor of New Spain sent a galleon and crew to the Spicelands to learn of Captain Fray Garcia de Loaysa's armada, and found things in the state that has been related, and of what happened on the galleon's arrival
- XXIX. How Hernando Cortes's galleon, captained by Alvaro de Saavedra, departed the Maluco carrying some Portuguese prisoners and the despicable thing they did to the captain in stealing the ship's boat-- and how the ship returned to Tidore
- XXX. How ...Captain Saavedra's galleon returned to the Maluco to be cleared to return to New Spain-- how the king of Gilolo and special friend of the Castilians died-- how Tidore was lost as well as our fortress by the treason and mutiny of Fernando de Bustamante
- XXXI. How the galleon of Governor Hernando Cortes returned a second time, coming to Camafo-- and how Captain Fernando de la Torre renewed the war because the Portuguese did not live up to the agreement-- and how the Indians on both sides made peace among themselves and agreed to kill the Castilians and the Portuguese
- XXXII. How Gonzalo Pereyra came to the Maluco as the king of Portugal's captain and arrested Don Jorge de Meneses-- and how Gonzalo Pereyra and the Castilians re-established the peace between the parties-- and how the Indians of Ternate rose up against the Portuguese, ...and how the Portuguese recovered their fortress and ... the Castilians sent to India to request passage to Spain
- XXXIII. How the Portuguese took the city of Gilolo where the Castilians were and how the Castilians and their captain passed over to the Portuguese and went with them to their fortress in Ternate where Captain Tristan de Atayde gave them the two thousand ducats that the Portuguese governor of India granted them for their journey
- XXXIV. A description of the clove islands called the Maluco, and an account of the clove gathered in each island one year to the next-- and of their customs, marriages, conduct and merchandise exchanged between those people-- and likewise of the Celebes Islands, the Banthan Islands
- XXXV. Of some customs, ceremonies, and rites of the Indians of the Spicelands-- and of how the Castilians left Maluco for India, passing by way of Java-- and especially of Captain Urdaneta, the one who most travelled and saw things of those parts
- XXXVI. Of a remarkable case of a fruit resembling almonds, and how many of them are found on a small islet without there being an almond tree or any tree that bears such a fruit on that island nor is that fruit produced where it is found-- rather it comes by air
- APPENDICES
- 1. The narrative which Andres de Urdaneta submits to your Majesty of the fleet which your Majesty despatched to the Spice Islands under the Comendador Loaysa, in the year 1525
- 2. Narrative of all that was traversed and discovered by the Captain Alvaro de Sayavedra who sailed from the port of Yacatulo in New Spain on November 1st, 1527: which fleet was despatched by Don Hernan Cortes, Marquis of Valle.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3 NO.38 | Available |
5. The voyages and manifesto of William Fergusson, a surgeon of the East India Company 1731-1739 [2021]
- Fergusson, William, approximately 1710-approximately 1776, author.
- London : Routledge for the Hakluyt Society, 2021
- Description
- Book — xviii, 185 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour), maps ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- INTRODUCTION
- Ship's Surgeons of the Early-Modern Era
- William Fergusson, Apprentice Apothecary-Surgeon
- European Medicine and the Indian Ocean World
- A Manifesto of the Enlightenment
- The Text
- THE VOYAGES OF WILLIAM FERGUSSON
- Voyage 1: Passage from Ayr to London, 7 June-16 July 1731
- Voyage 2: London to Calcutta, 30 January 1733-12 August 1734
- Voyage 3: London to the Malabar Coast, 1 December 1735-30 April 1737
- Voyage 4: London to Canton, 6 October 1737-15 July 1739
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.37 | Available |
- Lampah-lampahipun Raden Mas Arya Purawa Lelana. English
- Candranegara I, Raden Mas Adipati Arya, approximately 1836-1885, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, for the Haklyut Society, 2020
- Description
- Book — xxii, 272 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps, portraits (some color) ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- Preface and acknowledgements
- A note on Illustrations
- List of maps and illustrations
- A Note on edition, translation and orthography
- Glossary
- Introduction
- Indigenous aristocracy and colonial history
- The author Candranegara and his network in a hybrid world
- Travel bestows authority
- The literary background of The Travels
- Account of the travels of Raden Mas Purwalelana, Volume One
- Preface by the person who made the corrections to this book
- Preface by the author
- The first journey
- From Salatiga to Semarang
- Semarang
- From Semarang to Batavia and visit to Batavia
- Bogor
- The Priangan Residency
- Ciamis and Cirebon
- The residencies of Tegal and Pekalongan, and back to Semarang
- The second journey
- From Salatiga to Semarang and Surabaya
- Surabaya
- The residency of Pasuruan
- The Tengger mountain ridge (continued) and the residency of Probolinggo
- The residency of Besuki
- Towards and in the residency of Banyuwangi
- From Sumberwaru back to Surabaya, and the regency of Mojokerto
- The residency of Kediri
- From Surabaya to Sedayu
- The residency of Rembang
- The residency of Jepara
- The regency of Demak, residency of Semarang
- The Travels of Raden Mas Arya Purwalelana, Volume Two
- The third journey
- Surakarta
- The regency of Pacitan and the residency of Madiun
- From Surakarta to the border of the residency of Madiun
- The residency of Madiun
- The residency of Rembang
- The regencies of Grobogan and Demak. The residency of Semarang
- The fourth journey
- The department of Ambarawa
- Mount Jambu and the residency of Kedu
- The principality of Yogyakarta
- Appendix A. A brief summary of pre-nineteenth century Javanese history
- The early Kingdoms
- New Islamic states and the VOC
- Appendix B. Alun-alun and kraton
- The kraton as centre of worldly power
- The kraton as sacred centre
- Appendix C. The Javanese calendar
- Appendix D. Colonial administration in Java
- Appendix E. Javanese titles, functions and honorifics
- Appendix F. Javanese
- The Javanese language
- Speech levels
- Appendix G. Javanese poetic conventions
- Appendix H. Weights and measurements
- Appendix I. Botanical names
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
Green Library, SAL3 (off-campus storage)
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
Find it
Stacks
|
|
DS646.2 .C3613 2020 | Unknown |
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:V.36 | Available |
- Feilden, H. W. (Henry Wemyss), 1838-1921.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge for The Hakluyt Society, 2019
- Description
- Book — xxxi, 400 pages, 12 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 26 cm
- Summary
-
- List of Maps and Illustrations
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and Symbols
- Weights, Measurements and Currency
- INTRODUCTION: HENRY WEMYSS FEILDEN, THE NATURALIST IN HMS ALERT, 1875 6
- 1. Prelude and Preparation
- 2. Henry Wemyss Feilden
- 3. Instructions for the Expedition
- 4. Outward Bound
- 5. Winter Quarters
- 6. Sledging in Earnest
- 7. Out of the Ice and Homeward Bound
- 8. Home again: Science, Politics and the Military
- 9. Geology and Specimens
- 10. Palaeobotany
- 11. Zoology
- 12. Coda
- EDITORIAL PRACTICE.
- THE ARCTIC JOURNAL OF CAPTAIN HENRY WEMYSS FEILDEN, RA.
- Prelude. 1 February 15 April 1875.
- Part I. Outward Bound. 20 May-1 September 1875.
- Part II. Winter Quarters. 2 September 1875 1 April 1876.
- Part III. Sledging in Earnest. 2 April 9 June 1876.
- Part IV. Sledging, Natural History, and Scurvy. 11 June 25 July 1876.
- Part V. Out of the Ice and Homeward Bound. 26 July 28 October 1876.
- Part VI. Science, Politics, and the Military. 29 October 1876 7 January 1787.
- APPENDICES
- Appendix A. Letters from Henry Chichester Hart, naturalist in HMS Discovery, to Feilden, received by Feilden in HMS Alert, and inserted by him in his journal.
- Appendix B. Letter from Richard W. Coppinger, surgeon in HMS Discovery, to Feilden, Repulse Bay.
- Appendix C. Chorus: 'The Palaeocrystic Sea'.
- Appendix D. Flora and Fauna in Feilden's Journal.
- Appendix E. List of enclosures in Feilden's journal at the Royal Geographical Society
- Appendix F. H.M.S. ALERT. Winter Routine.
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.35 | Available |
- Lee, John, 1783-1866 author.
- London : Published by Routledge for The Hakluyt Society, 2018.
- Description
- Book — xx, 377 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- CONTENTS
- List of Maps and Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Symbols, Weights, Measures and Currency
- Itinerary
- INTRODUCTION
- 1. Brief Biography of John Lee, ne Fiott (1783-1866)
- 2. Lee's Walking Tour of England, Wales and Ireland
- 3. Landscapes of the Home Tour
- 4. The Tour in Ireland
- a. History and Antiquities
- b. Memories of 1798 and 1803 in Lee's Diaries
- 5. Lee as a Scientific Traveller
- 6. Textual Introduction
- a. The Text
- b. Editorial Conventions
- c. Critical Apparatus
- DIARIES OF A TOUR OF ENGLAND, WALES AND IRELAND IN 1806-1807
- 1. Tour from London to Holywell in Wales
- 2. Tour from Holywell to Dublin and Fermoy
- 3. Mallow to Bantry
- 4. Bantry to Castlemain
- 5. Killarney to Dublin
- APPENDIX 1
- 6. Sketchbook, 1806
- 7. Sketchbook, 1806-7
- 8. Sketchbook, 1807
- APPENDIX 2
- Correspondence of John Lee (ne Fiott) Relating to Visits to Ireland in 1806-7 and 1857
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3 NO.34 | Available |
- Voyage to the South-sea by the command of King Charles the Second
- Narbrough, John, Sir, 1640-1688, author.
- London : Routledge for the Hakluyt Society, 2018.
- Description
- Book — xx, 723 pages, 1 unnumbered folded plate : illustrations (some color), maps (some color), facsmiles ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- INTRODUCTION
- 1. The Manuscript and Printed Records of the Voyage Included in this Volume
- a: British Library, Add 88980A, B, C and D Narbrough's `Booke' and accompanying Charts
- b: Bodleian Library, MS Rawl. A. 318
- c: Relationship of BL, Add 88980A to MS Rawl. A. 318
- d: British Library, Add MS 5414,29, `The Sloane Map'
- e: British Library, Maps K. Top 124.84.`The Royal Map'
- f: British Library, Sloane MS 819, Lieutenant Peckett's Journal
- g: Royal Society CI.P/7i/32, Richard Williams's Brief Account
- h: Beinecke Library, Osborn b394, William Chamber's Journal
- 2. Captain John Wood's Account
- a: British Library, Sloane MS 3833, Journal
- b: British Library, Sloane MS 46A, Sailing Directions for the Strait of Magellan
- c: British Library, Sloane MS 46B Wood's Straights of Magellan
- 3. Contemporary Records and Published Accounts Made after Narbrough's Return
- a: Francisco de Seyxas y Lovera, Piratas y contrabandistas
- b: Smith and Walford, An Account of Several Late Voyages &c., 1694
- c: The Published Chart of the Strait of Magellan, 1673
- d: William Hacke's publication of John Wood's `Voyage thro' the Streights of Magellan'
- 4. The Context of Narbrough's Voyage
- 5. The `Proposition' of Narbrough's Voyage
- 6. The Commissioning of John Narbrough
- 7. Narbrough's Ships
- a: The Sweepstakes
- b: The Batchelour
- 8. Captain John Narbrough and his Officers
- a: John Narbrough
- b: Lieutenant Thomas Armiger
- c: Lieutenant Nathaniell Peckett
- d: Abraham Hyatt
- e: Mr John Wood
- f: Mr John Fortescue
- g: Captain Humphrey Fleming
- h: Supernumeraries:Don Carlos Henriquez and Solomon Franco
- 9. The Events of the Voyage
- 10. Interactions with Indigenous Peoples
- 11. The Fate of the Detainees
- 12. Further Information about Don Carlos found in Recently located Materials
- 13. The Spanish Reaction to Narbrough's Voyage
- 14. Navigation
- a: Narbrough's Navigation
- b: Charts
- c: Chambers' Navigation
- 15. Narbrough's Surveying
- 16. The Outcome of the Voyage
- 17. Use of the Published Version of Narbrough's Voyage by Other Navigators
- 18. Historical Opinion on Narbrough's conduct of the Voyage
- 19. Editorial Conventions Adopted in the Transcription of the Manuscripts
- PART I. The Prelude to Narbrough's Voyage
- PART II. Narbrough's Journals
- a: A Jornall Be Gan with his Majesties Shipp the Sweepstakes the 15: Day of may 1669. The Shipp at deptford which Beinge then ordered to fitt. And Keept By Captaine John Narbrough: then Commander of her one [on] her Vojage through the Straits of Magallan: into the South Sea to Baldavia and from thence Back againe unto England to Deptford
- b: This is a part of Sr John Narbrough's voyages, somewhat different from the print
- PART III The records of Nathaniel Peckett, Richard Williams and William Chambers
- a: The Voyage of the King's Shipp Called the Sweepstakes to Baldavia. Annoque Domini1669. By Nathanyell Peckett, Lieutenant
- b: Richard Williams's short accompt
- c: The Journal of William Chambers
- PART IV A Declaration made by one Charles Henrique Clerck off the Proposalls made by the Royall Compania for trade, to his Majestie Anno 1663.
- APPENDICES
- 1. The Legends on the Charts Drawn by John Narbrough
- 2. Place-Names given by Narbrough still in use today
- 3. Personnel: Recruitment and Pay
- 4. Subsequent Publications containing Narbrough's `The Voyage to the South-Sea', 1694.
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.33 | Available |
- Grant, James Augustus, 1827-1892, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge for The Hakluyt Society, 2018.
- Description
- Book — xxix, 411 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- INTRODUCTION
- 1. Grant and his Contribution to the Nile Expedition of 1860-1863
- 2. Prelude to the Expedition: East African Development to 1860 and the Idea of the Nile Expedition
- 3. The Nile Problem: Controversy and Credulity
- 4. Grant's Geographical Work and his Views on the Nile Problem
- 5. Grant's Reputation and the Place of his Work and Exploration: a Survey of the Literature
- THE TEXT OF A WALK ACROSS AFRICA WITH EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL
- Preface [by J. A. Grant]
- I Plymouth to Zanzibar
- II Zanzibar and Bagomoyo
- III Journey to Kazeh
- IV Sojourn at Kazeh
- V Journey to Ukuni and Sojourn at Mineenga
- VI Life in Ukuni
- VII Ukuni to Karagwe
- VIII Karagwe
- IX The Uganda March
- X Buganda
- XI From Buganda to Bunyoro and `Captain Speke Proceeds to the Lake Nyanza'
- XII Bunyoro, the Omukama Kamrasi and Embarking on the Nile
- XIII From Bunyoro to an Egyptian Encampment at Faloro
- XIV Life with the Khartoum Traders and News of Speke's Death
- XV Passage through the Bari Country, Gondokoro and the Meetings with Baker and Petherick
- XVI From Gondokoro to Khartoum by Boat
- XVII `A Modern Babylon': Khartoum
- XVIII From Khartoum to Cairo
- APPENDIX A: List of Personal Kit Taken with us from England for the Expedition.
- APPENDIX B: Letter dated 17 November 1864 from Trenham Reeks to Captain Grant
- EPILOGUE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3 NO.32 | Available |
11. Annals of the American Association of Geographers [2016 -]
- Philadelphia, PA : Taylor & Francis Group, LLC, 2016-
- Description
- Journal/Periodical
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks
|
Request (opens in new tab) |
910.6 .A849 V.110 2020:JUL-NOV | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.110 2020:JAN.-MAY | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.109 2019:SEP.-NOV | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.109 2019:MAY-JUL | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.109 2019:JAN.-MAR | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.108 2018:SEP.-NOV | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.108 2018:MAY-JUL | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.108 2018:JAN.-MAR | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.107 2017:SEP.-NOV | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.107 2017:MAY-JUL | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.107 2017:JAN.-MAR | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.106 2016:JUL.-NOV | Available |
910.6 .A849 V.106 2016:JAN.-MAY | Available |
12. Sir Joseph Banks, Iceland and the North Atlantic 1772-1820 : journals, letters and documents [2016]
- London : Routledge : for The Hakluyt Society, 2016.
- Description
- Book — xxvi, 681 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- Contents: Preface
- Introduction: Banks and Iceland
- Textual introduction
- Introduction to the journals
- The Iceland journal of Sir Joseph Banks I: from 12 July 1772 to 6 September 1772
- The Iceland journal of Sir Joseph Banks II
- The Iceland journal of James Roberts
- Calendar of letters and documents
- The Iceland correspondence and documents of Sir Joseph Banks, 1772-1820
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
Green Library, SAL3 (off-campus storage)
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
Find it Stacks | |
QH31 .B19 S57 2016 | Unknown |
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.30 | Available |
- Relación. English
- Rada, Pedro de, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, for the Hakluyt Society, 2016.
- Description
- Book — xiv, 203 pages : maps ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- List of Maps Preface, Acknowledgements and Dedication Abbreviations Weights, Measures and Currency
- INTRODUCTION 1. Overview 2. Documentation of the voyage and Pedro de Rada's Relacion 3. Rada's manuscript 4. Brazil as a venue for European rivalries 5. The Spanish response to Drake's passage through the Strait of Magellan 6. Personal conflict in the Armada of the Strait: Sarmiento versus Flores 7. Planning and early preparations for the armada 8. Recruiting sailors and soldiers 9. Final preparations 10. The disastrous first departure from Spain 11. Definitive departure of the Armada of the Strait 12. From Cadiz to the Cape Verde Islands 13. Arrival and layover in Brazil, 25 March-26 October 1582 14. The best laid plans go awry: The first attempt to enter the Strait 15. Encounters with the expedition of Edward Fenton 16. The second attempt to reach the Strait, January-February, 1583 17. The relief mission joins the armada 18. The third attempt to reach the Strait, and Sarmiento's complaints 19. Flores focuses on the armada's military mission 20. The Battle of Paraiba and the return to Iberia 21. Aftermath 22. Notes to the translation
- THE RELACION OF PEDRO DE RADA Table of Contents Why and how His Majesty gathered the armada From 25 September 1581, when it sailed from San Lucar de Barrameda, until 7 October 1581 From 9 December 1581, when it left the Bahia de Cadiz, until 11 January 1582, when it arrived at the island of Santiago de Cabo Verde, and what occurred there From 2 February 1582, when it left Santiago de Cabo Verde, until 25 March, when it arrived at the Rio de Janeiro, and what occurred there From 2 November 1582, when it sailed from the Rio de Janeiro toward the Strait of Magellan, until 17 December, when it turned back toward Santa Catarina From 7 January 1583, when it left Santa Catarina, until 19 January, when it arrived near the Rio de la Plata and Don Alonso de Sotomayor was sent to Buenos Aires From 19 January 1583, when it left the Rio de la Plata, until 17 February, when it arrived at the Strait of Magellan and was forced to turn back, until 31 March, when it arrived at Sao Vicente From 28 April 1583, when it departed from Santos y Sao Vicente, until 9 May, when it arrived at the Rio de Janeiro From 2 June 1583, when it sailed from the Rio de Janeiro, until 13 July, when it arrived at Bahia From 1 March 1584, when it left Bahia, until 19 March, when it arrived at Pernambuco From 16 April 1584, when it departed from Pernambuco, until it arrived at the port of la Paraiba, which was taken from the French and a fort was built there From 1 May 1584, when it departed from the port of la Paraiba, until 26 June, when it arrived at the island of Terceira From 3 July 1584, when it departed from Terceira, until 17 July, when it arrived at the Bahia de Cadiz
- DOCUMENTS APPENDED TO RADA'S RELACION Instruccion given to the captains, pilots and masters of the armada in San Lucar on 25 September 1581 Instruccion given to the captains, pilots and masters in Santiago de Cabo Verde on 28 January 1582 Instruccion given to the captains in the Rio de Janeiro on 4 October 1582 regarding the first attempt to reach the Strait Instruccion given to the accountant Andres de Eguino on 5 January 1583 in the port of Santa Catarina Acuerdo made on 19 January 1583 at the mouth of the Rio de la Plata about the departure of Don Alonso de Sotomayor Instruccion given on 26 April 1583 to Tomas Garri, alcaide of the fort built in the port of Santos Acuerdo made on 5 December 1582, the armada being at a latitude of 35 degrees What General Diego Flores proposed in the Rio de Janeiro on 13 May 1583 about leaving five navios of the armada to return to the Strait Instruccion given to Diego de la Rivera in the Rio de Janeiro on 31 May 1583 regarding his return to the Strait Requerimiento that the general issued to Manuel Tellez Bareto, governor of Bahia, 28 November 1583 Instruccion given in Salvador, on 27 February 1584 regarding sailing to Pernambuco and la Paraiba Instruccion given to Diogo Baez da Veiga and Captain Pedro Corea de la Cerda, in Bahia on 29 February 1584 Vow and pledge of homage made by Captain Francisco de Castrejon, alcaide of the fort in la Paraiba, with the instruccion, etc. given to him. Report of the money that was carried from Spain, and what was spent and loaned on the coast of Brazil until the armada returned to Spain Report of the powder, lead and match-cord that was given to Juan de Urbina on 29 June 1584 on the island of Terceira Report that Don Francisco de Vera gave on 15 December 1582 about the two English galleons that captured him Copies of the letters that the English general wrote in Santos on 20 January 1583 The rutter taken in Sao Vicente from an Englishman who accompanied Francis Drake
- APPENDICES 1. Ships and Persons in the Armada of the Strait on 7 December 1581 2: Fate of Ships in the Armada of the Strait from 25 September 1581 to 21 September 1584.
- BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.31 | Available |
14. Australia circumnavigated : the voyage of Matthew Flinders in HMS Investigator, 1801-1803 [2015]
- Diaries. Selections
- Flinders, Matthew, 1774-1814.
- Farnham, Surrey ; Burlington, VT : Published by Ashgate for the Hakluyt Society, London, 2015.
- Description
- Book — 2 volumes : illustrations (some color), maps, portraits ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- Contents: Volume I: Preface. Introduction: Background to the voyage
- The Investigator
- The instructions for the voyage
- The circumnavigation of Terra Australis
- The wreck of the Porpoise
- The voyage of the Cumberland
- Detention at the Ile de France
- Flinders as a naval commander
- Encounters with Aborigines
- The Makasar trepangers
- Scientific achievements
- Artistic achievements
- The astronomical data
- Surveying, nautical astronomy and hydrography
- Survey sheets and charts
- A Voyage to Terra Australis and the Atlas. Textual Introduction: The fair journals and the 'memoir'
- Flinders's rough journals
- The Bearing Book
- Other primary voyage sources compiled during the Investigator expedition
- The edited text
- Place names. Journal of a voyage to Terra Australis in his Majesty's ship Investigator by Matthew Flinders commander - Part 1: from England to Sydney Cove and Port Jackson, Australia, January 1801-July1802. Volume II: Journal of a voyage to Terra Australis in his Majesty's ship Investigator by Matthew Flinders commander - Part 2: The voyage around Australia, July 1802-June 1803. The 'Memoir'. Appendices
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks
|
Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.28 | Available |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.29 | Available |
- London : Published by Ashgate for the Hakluyt Society, 2014.
- Description
- Book — 2 volumes : illustrations, maps ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- v. 1. [1806-1824]
- v. 2. [1824-1860].
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks
|
Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.26 | Available |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.27 | Available |
- De missione legatorum Iaponensium ad Romanam curiam. English
- Sande, Duarte de, 1531-1600.
- Farnham, Surrey, England ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate ; London : For the Hakluyt Society, 2012.
- Description
- Book — xxii, 481 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm.
- Summary
-
- Contents: Preface
- Note on currency
- Note on Romanisation of Japanese and Chinese names
- Introduction: Background to De Missione
- Objectives of the Embassy and the individuals chosen
- Publication of De Missione
- Authorship of De Missione
- Sources of De Missione
- Contextualizing De Missione
- Evaluating De Missione and the Tensho embassy
- The boys after their return to Japan
- Conclusion. Text: A Dialogue Concerning the Mission of the Japanese Ambassadors to the Roman Curia: Colloquium I-XXXIV
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Contents: Preface
- A note on currency
- Romanization of Japanese and Chinese names
- Introduction: Background to De Missione
- Objectives of the Embassy and the individuals chosen
- Publication of De Missione
- Authorship of De Missione
- Sources of De Missione
- Contextualizing De Missione
- Evaluating De Missione and the Tensho embassy
- The boys after their return to Japan
- Conclusion. Text: A Dialogue Concerning the Mission of the Japanese Ambassadors to the Roman Curia: Imprimatur
- Nihil obstat
- Alessandro Valignan of the Society of Jesus to the pupils of the Japanese seminaries
- Duarte de Sande to Claudio Aquaviva, Superior General of the Society of Jesus
- Contents of these Colloquia
- Colloquium I-XXXIV
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.25 | Available |
17. Pedro Páez's History of Ethiopia, 1622 [2011]
- História da Etiópia. English
- Paez, Pedro, 1564-1622.
- Farnham, Surrey, England ; Burlington, VT : Published by Ashgate for the Hakluyt Society, 2011.
- Description
- Book — 2 v. (xx, 501; 429 p.) : ill., maps ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- Pedro Paez's History of Ethiopia, 1622, continued:
- Book III
- Book IV
- Historical glossary
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Preface
- Introduction
- The History of Ethiopia: Dedicatory letter
- Prologue to the reader
- Book I
- Book II
- Maps
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Volume I: Preface
- Introduction
- The History of Ethiopia: Dedicatory letter
- Prologue to the reader
- Book I
- Book II.
- Volume II: Pedro Paez's History of Ethiopia, 1622, continued:
- Book III
- Book IV
- Historical glossary
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.23 | Available |
910 .H157 SER.3:NO.24 | Available |
- Wisniewski, Stanley H.
- Rochester, NY : New York State Archaeological Association, 2010.
- Description
- Book — vii, 104 p. : ill., maps ; 28 cm.
- Summary
-
- The environment of Maspeth, past and present
- The Maspeth site : a contemporary view
- The Maspeth Indians
- Seventeenth-century history of the Maspeth area
- The De Witt Clinton House and the Queens Head Tavern
- Archaeological sites elsewhere in Maspeth
- The seventeenth-century fireplace
- Historical artifacts from Maspeth Creek and Laurel Hill areas
- The Garvis pipe factory
- Prehistoric artifacts from the Maspeth site (QN14)
- Overall conclusions
- Disposition of the Maspeth artifacts.
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
SAL3 (off-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
913.747 N56 V.18:NO.1 | Available |
19. Heiji monogatari [2010]
- 平治物語
- Tōkyō : Miyai Shoten, Heisei 22 [2010] 東京 : 三弥井書店, 平成22 [2010]
- Description
- Book — 439 p. ; 22 cm.
- Online
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage)
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
NDC collection: Request for pickup at East Asia Library | Request (opens in new tab) |
910.24 C671 V.17 | Available |
20. Kōtei chūinbon heike monogatari [2010 - 2011]
- 校訂中院本平家物語
- Shohan. 初版. - Tōkyō : Miyai Shoten, Heisei 22-23 [2010-2011] 東京 : 三弥井書店, 平成 22-23 [2010-2011]
- Description
- Book — 2 v. ; 22 cm.
- Online
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage)
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage) | Status |
---|---|
NDC collection: Request for pickup at East Asia Library
|
Request (opens in new tab) |
910.24 C671 V.18:PT.1 | Available |
910.24 C671 V.18:PT.2 | Available |