
audiobook
This volume opens a fascinating window onto England’s early encounters with the wider world, concentrating on the nation’s voyages toward Asia. Within a careful blend of translated chronicles and scholarly notes, listeners will hear the voices of medieval travelers as they describe distant lands, exotic goods, and the diplomatic ties that began to knit together far‑flung regions. The narrative captures the curiosity and ambition that drove English scholars and rulers to look beyond their shores, offering a vivid sense of the era’s adventurous spirit.
One of the most striking stories follows a Welsh scholar who rose to prominence as a college head before his theological ideas sparked controversy across Europe, Egypt, and Syria. His travels illustrate how English minds engaged with diverse cultures and ideas long before the age of exploration. The volume then shifts to a later, equally compelling episode: a king’s generous patronage sending a bishop on a daring mission to Saint Thomas in India. The account details the bishop’s successful journey, the exotic treasures he returned with, and the early threads of trade and faith that linked England to the Indian subcontinent.
Full title
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 08 Asia, Part I
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (633K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-02-01
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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