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ISBN: HB: 9780300217780

Yale University Press

July 2016

224 pp.

21x14 cm

32 black&white illus.

HB:
£44,00
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First Circumnavigators

Unsung Heroes of the Age of Discovery

Prior histories of the first Spanish mariners to circumnavigate the globe in the sixteenth century have focused on Ferdinand Magellan and the other illustrious leaders of these daring expeditions. Harry Kelsey's masterfully researched study is the first to concentrate on the hitherto anonymous sailors, slaves, adventurers, and soldiers who manned the ships. The author contends that these initial transglobal voyages occurred by chance, beginning with the launch of Magellan's armada in 1519, when the crews dispatched by the king of Spain to claim the Spice Islands in the western Pacific were forced to seek a longer way home, resulting in bitter confrontations with rival Portuguese. Kelsey's enthralling history, based on more than thirty years of research in European and American archives, offers fascinating stories of treachery, greed, murder, desertion, sickness, and starvation but also of courage, dogged persistence, leadership, and loyalty.

About the Author

Harry Kelsey is a research scholar at the Huntington Library and the author of several acclaimed biographies of sixteenth-century explorers, including "Sir Francis Drake: The Queen's Pirate". He lives in Altadena, CA.

Reviews

"Through an exhaustive search of original documents, the author has put life into nearly every person who sailed on these early voyages" – Iris Engstrand, University of San Diego

"There are few historians who have mastered the source material pertaining to this period to the extent that Kelsey has. A wonderful read for anyone interested in the history of world exploration" – John Johnson, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History