Two voyages to the South Seas : Australia, New Zealand, Oceania 1826-1829 : Straits of Magellan, Chile, Oceania, New Guinea, Australia, Sousth East Asia, Tasmania, Antarctica, New Zealand, Torres Strait 1837-1840 in the corvettes

書誌事項

Two voyages to the South Seas : Australia, New Zealand, Oceania 1826-1829 : Straits of Magellan, Chile, Oceania, New Guinea, Australia, Sousth East Asia, Tasmania, Antarctica, New Zealand, Torres Strait 1837-1840 in the corvettes

Jules S.-C. Dumont d'Urville ; translated from the French and retold by Helen Rosenman

Melbourne University Press, 1992

タイトル別名

Voyage de la corvette l'Astrolabe

Voyage au Pôle Sud et dans l'Océanie sur les corvettes L'Astrolabe et la Zélé

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注記

Bibliography: p. 289-293

Includes index

収録内容

  • The voyage of Astrolabe 1826-1829
  • The voyage of Astrolabe and Zélée 1837-1840

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Rear-Admiral Dumont d'Urville, the French James Cook, was a brilliant sailor who made two great scientific and exploratory voyages to the Pacific and the Antarctic. The first, 1826-29, solved the 40-year-old mystery of the disappearance of Laperouse. The coup of the second voyage, 1837-40, was d'Urville's discovery, ahead of the American Wilkes and the British Ross expeditions, that Antarctica was a continent. He charted and conducted a risky landing on the coast he named "Terre Adelie" after his wife. He was twice in New Zealand. In 1840, to his chagrin, when he was in the South Island, Britain proclaimed sovereignty over both islands to thwart French plans to settle the Banks Peninsula. D'Urville possessed enormous vitality, curiosity, perseverance and scepticism. His own and his officers' shrewd observations on the many places visited present a sad and often angry commentary on the devastation being wreaked on the ancient but fragile cultures and environments of Oceania. They witnessed frequently unscrupulous and criminal representatives of predatory Europe forcing their commercial values, diseases and religious upon the hapless populations. "Helen Rosenman lives in Sydney and taught French at Macquarie University from 1969 to 1980. At the suggestion of Stephen Murray-Smith, she edited and translated from the French Dumont d'Urville's official accounts of the two expeditions he led. This was published in two volumes by Melbourne University Press in 1987. So taken by d'Urville's story, Rosenman has rewritten the tale to create a gripping narrative account of those voyages in one volume.".

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