
A vivid portrait of the Elizabethan age emerges from this remarkable collection of early travel narratives. Compiled by a scholar who spent his youth amid the bustling halls of Westminster and Oxford, the work weaves together the accounts of daring mariners, ambitious colonists, and the cartographers who first tried to chart a world still largely unknown to Europe. The editor’s own passion for geography and adventure shines through, giving each tale a sense of purpose beyond mere curiosity—each voyage is presented as a step toward a broader understanding of the globe.
Among the stories, readers encounter the bold rescue of two hundred and sixty‑six Christians from Turkish captivity in Alexandria, a daring episode that captures the peril and compassion of seafaring life. Other passages follow English ships braving the Strait of Gibraltar, confronting Ottoman galleys, and charting new coastlines, all recounted with the careful scholarship of a man who turned his love of exploration into a lasting record. The result is a compelling window into the ambitions, hardships, and discoveries that shaped the early modern world.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (234K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Les Bowler. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2003-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

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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