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Scarce late c.18th engraved French edition of Phillip Carteret’s coastal profile of Alejandro Selkirk Island previously known as Mas Afuera and the most westerly of the Juan Fernandez Archipelago, Chile. The map is based on surveys conducted in July–August 1767 … Read Full Description
$A 50
Within Australia
All orders ship freewithin Australia
Rest of the World
Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide
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Scarce late c.18th engraved French edition of Phillip Carteret’s coastal profile of Alejandro Selkirk Island previously known as Mas Afuera and the most westerly of the Juan Fernandez Archipelago, Chile. The map is based on surveys conducted in July–August 1767 during the voyage of the Swallow.
The first European sighting of Nukutavake occurred in 1767, when the English navigator Samuel Wallis named it Queen Charlotte Island (French: Reine Charlotte). The map is frequently, though erroneously, attributed to James Cook, a misunderstanding arising from its publication in John Hawkesworth’s Relation des voyages entrepris par ordre de Sa Majesté Britannique actuellement régnante, the authoritative French edition of the official narratives of the voyages of Byron, Wallis, Carteret and Cook, and in fact records Carteret’s independent hydrographic work undertaken during his circumnavigation of 1766–69.
References:
Beddie, M. Bibliography of Captain James Cook, RN,FRS, Circumnavigator. Sydney 1970: 659.
Collections:
Bibliotheque Nationale de France: 4-P2-19
National Library New Zealand: NLNZ ALMA 9913312233502836
New York Public Library: KBF (Hawkesworth, J. Relation des voyages entrepris) v. 1-4
State Library New South Wales: 991013932229702626
State Library Victoria: RARELTF ; 910.41 H31R
State Library South Australia: 910.4 H395 b
State Library Queensland: LCCallNum: 05034855.
Philip Carteret (1733 - 1796)
British naval officer and explorer who participated in two of the Royal Navy's circumnavigation expeditions in 1764-66 and 1766-69. Carteret entered the Navy in 1747, serving aboard the Salisbury, and then under Captain John Byron from 1751 to 1755. Between 1757 and 1758 he was in the Guernsey on the Mediterranean Station. As a lieutenant in the Dolphin he accompanied Byron during his voyage of circumnavigation, from June 1764 to May 1766. In 1766 he was made a commander and given the command of the Swallow to circumnavigate the world, as consort to the Dolphin under the command of Samuel Wallis. The two ships were parted shortly after sailing through the Strait of Magellan, Carteret discovering Pitcairn Island and the Carteret Islands, which were subsequently named after him. In 1767, he also discovered a new archipelago inside Saint George's Channel between New Ireland and New Britain Islands (Papua New Guinea) and named it Duke of York Islands, as well as rediscovered the Solomon Islands first sighted by the Mendana in 1568, and the Juan Fernandez Islands first discovered by Juan Fernandez in 1574. He arrived back in England, at Spithead, on 20 March 1769. He was promoted to post captain in 1771.
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