The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 02

audiobook

The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 02

by Richard Hakluyt

EN·~8 hours·5 chapters

Chapters

5 total
1

Produced by Karl Hagen, Juliet Sutherland,

1:17
2

VOL. II. - NORTHEASTERN EUROPE, AND ADJACENT COUNTRIES. - Part I. - TARTARY.

0:15
3

AND

0:02
4

EASTERN EUROPE AND THE MUSCOVY COMPANY.

0:06
5

Part of an Epistle written by one Yuo of Narbona vnto the Archbishop of Burdeaux, containing the confession of an Englishman as touching the barbarous demeanour of the Tartars, which had liued long among them, and was drawen along perforce with them in their expedition against Hungarie: Recorded by Mathew Paris in the yere of your Lord 1243.

8:53:12

Description

A richly compiled set of early‑modern accounts, this volume opens a window onto the English nation’s encounters with the far‑eastern frontiers of Europe. Collected from letters, reports and official dispatches, the narratives trace English travelers as they witness the volatile politics of Tartary, the Muscovy Company’s ventures, and the uneasy borderlands of Hungary and the Balkans. The prose, preserved in its original spelling yet clarified by modern footnotes, captures the raw immediacy of a world where armies march, towns are besieged, and cultural misunderstandings run rampant.

Listeners will hear vivid descriptions of a harrowing siege, the stark brutality reported by an English exile among the Tartars, and the uneasy diplomacy that follows. Interwoven are the editor’s scholarly notes that explain archaic terms and provide context without overwhelming the story. Together they offer a compelling portrait of a restless age, where curiosity, conflict, and commerce collided on the edge of the known world.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (513K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Hakluyt

Richard Hakluyt

d. 1616

A clergyman and writer at the center of England’s age of exploration, he gathered the travel accounts that helped shape how his country imagined the wider world. His great collections of voyages remain one of the richest windows into Elizabethan seafaring and colonial ambition.

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