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Great south land / Rob Mundle.
Record no.:
Author:
Publisher:
Sydney NSW :: HarperCollins Publishers Australia,
Year:
2015.
Description:
351 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some colour), maps (some colour), portraits
Subject:
Notes:
"How Dutch sailors found Australia and an English pirate almost beat Captain Cook..."--Cover. "ABC Books".
Tertiary/Undergraduate.
General.Noel Dan
Gift ;
2023.
Type:
Monograph
ISBN:
9780733332371 :;
Abstract:
The spice trade - camels and caravels -- A step into the new world -- The Brouwer route and the roaring forties -- Hartog: blown into the history books -- A coast of hazards, not desire -- Charting, mapping and exploring the gulf -- Morsels, magnificence
and a massacre -- Treachery, mutiny and murder -- Land of gold -- The land that wasn't found -- Success and failure -- Enter the pirate -- A life of 'crime': buccaneers and the Bachelor's Delight -- From buccaneer to bestseller -- Return to New Holland -- The loss of Roebuck.

For many, the colonial story of Australia starts with Captain Cook's discovery of the east coast in 1770, but it was some 164 years before his historic voyage that European mariners began their romance with the immensity of the Australian continent. Between 1606 and 1688, while the British had their hands full with the Gunpowder Plot and the English Civil War, it was highly skilled Dutch seafarers who, by design, chance or shipwreck, discovered and mapped the majority of the vast, unknown waters and land masses in the Indian and Southern Oceans.This is the setting that sees Rob Mundle back on the water with another sweeping and powerful account of Australian maritime history. It is the story of 17th-century European mariners - sailors, adventurers and explorers - who became transfixed by the idea of the existence of a Great South Land: 'Terra Australis Incognita'. Rob takes you aboard the tiny ship, Duyfken, in 1605 when Dutch navigator and explorer, Willem Janszoon, and his 20-man crew became the first Europeans to discover Australia on the western coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria. In the decades that followed, more Dutch mariners, like Hartog, Tasman, and Janszoon (for a second time), discovered and mapped the majority of the coast of what would become Australia. Yet, incredibly, the Dutch made no effort to lay claim to it, or establish any settlements. This process began with British explorer and former pirate William Dampier on the west coast in 1688, and by the time Captain Cook arrived in 1770, all that was to be done was chart the east coast and claim what the Dutch had discovered.
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994.01 / MUND
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