Reise in die Aequinoctial-Gegenden des neuen Continents. Band 3.

audiobook

Reise in die Aequinoctial-Gegenden des neuen Continents. Band 3.

by Alexander von Humboldt

DE·~11 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

Reise in die Aequinoctial-Gegenden des neuen Continents. Band 3.

0:20
2

Inhalt

0:01
3

Achzehntes Kapitel.

1:27:40
4

Neunzehntes Kapitel.

2:28:01
5

Zwanzigstes Kapitel.

2:29:19
6

Einundzwanzigstes Kapitel.

1:27:21
7

Zweiundzwanzigstes Kapitel.

1:59:54
8

Dreiundzwanzigstes Kapitel.

1:57:34
9

Liste explizit genannter Werke

6:30
10

Anmerkungen des Korrekturlesers

0:40

Description

The volume opens with a vivid portrait of the untamed Llanos, where the great rivers Apure, Arauca, Payara and Meta carve a labyrinthine network through endless savannas. Through the eyes of early explorers and missionaries, the reader learns how the brutal campaigns of the 16th‑century conquistadors gave way to quieter, often arduous Jesuit and Capuchin expeditions seeking to map and settle the region. The narrative weaves geography, indigenous cultures such as the Cabres and Caraibes, and the shifting balance of power as European ambitions softened.

A focal point is the modest town of San Fernando de Apure, founded in 1789 on the banks of the navigable Apure River, just fifty miles from the coast of Caracas. The author describes its role as a trade hub for cocoa, cotton, indigo and hides, and paints the annual flood season when surrounding lowlands turn into a shallow lake, submerging farms and villages. These early chapters combine careful cartographic detail with lively anecdotes, giving listeners a sense of the challenges faced by those who first tried to tame this watery frontier.

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Details

Language

de

Duration

~11 hours (688K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2009-03-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Alexander von Humboldt

Alexander von Humboldt

1769–1859

A restless explorer and brilliant observer, he helped people see nature as one connected whole. His travels in Latin America and his sweeping book Kosmos made him one of the most influential scientific writers of the 19th century.

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