
audiobook
A vivid window into England’s early global ambitions, this volume gathers the first‑hand reports, royal licences and diplomatic exchanges that shaped the Muscovy Company’s push toward the north‑eastern seas. Readers encounter the bold petitions of English merchants, the generous privileges granted by the Russian emperor, and the intricate negotiations that opened ports from Moscow to the far‑flung outposts of Kazan and Astrakhan.
The text preserves the original 16th‑century spelling and marginal notes, letting listeners hear the rhythm of the period’s language while modern footnotes clarify obscure terms. Through these documents, the early hopes of finding a northern passage to the riches of the East come alive, revealing the blend of commerce, politics and curiosity that drove England’s first forays into the Russian hinterland.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (775K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-03-01
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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