The Discovery of Muscovy

audiobook

The Discovery of Muscovy

by Richard Hakluyt

EN·~3 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

THE Discovery of Muscovy.

0:13

INTRODUCTION.

3:57

THE NEW NAVIGATION AND DISCOVERY OF THE KINGDOM OF MUSCOVY

1:02:51

The Copy of the Duke of Muscovy and Emperor or Russia his Letters, sent to King Edward VI., by the hands of Richard Chanceler.

3:39

The Coins, Weights, and Measures, used in Russia.

31:13

The Letter of Master George Killingworth, the Company’s First Agent in Muscovy,

24:02

A DISCOURSE

23:04

THE VOYAGE.

45:27

THE VOYAGES OF Ohthere and Wulfstan

26:58

ELEGIAC VERSES BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.

2:35

Description

In the mid‑sixteenth century English merchants, frustrated by stagnant markets at home, turned their eyes toward the distant north. A bold venture was launched under Sir Hugh Willoughby, whose fleet braved the icy seas only to be scattered by a violent storm, leaving Willoughby’s crew to perish while his companion ship pressed on. The surviving pilot, Richard Chancellor, completed the perilous journey, opening a tentative trade route to the Russian lands that would change England’s commercial outlook.

The narrative places this daring expedition against a sweeping portrait of Muscovy’s evolution—from its early Slavic roots and Viking influences to the consolidation of power under Ivan III and the tempestuous reign of Ivan the Terrible. By weaving together the political ambitions of the English and the cultural richness of the Russian court, the work reveals how curiosity, ambition, and hardship forged the first lasting connections between two distant kingdoms. Listeners will discover a vivid tableau of exploration, diplomacy, and the human stories that shaped early Anglo‑Russian trade.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (215K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Hakluyt

Richard Hakluyt

d. 1616

Best known for gathering the great travel stories of Elizabethan England, this clergyman and writer helped turn exploration into a national project. His books preserved firsthand accounts of voyages and strongly encouraged English settlement overseas, especially in North America.

View all books

You may also like