The Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation: Made by Sea Or Over-land to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compasse of These 1600 Yeeres, Issue 10James MacLehose and Sons, 1904 |
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Page 11
... anker , and set saile on their voyage , having a prosperous winde thereunto . 1564 . The fourth of November they had sight of the Iland of Madera , and the sixt day of Teneriffe , which they thought to have beene the Canarie , in that ...
... anker , and set saile on their voyage , having a prosperous winde thereunto . 1564 . The fourth of November they had sight of the Iland of Madera , and the sixt day of Teneriffe , which they thought to have beene the Canarie , in that ...
Page 21
... anker in the Rivers mouth the two shippes , the River being twenty leagues in , where the Portugals roade : hee came thither the five and twentieth , and dispatched his businesse , and so returned with two Caravels , loaden with Negros ...
... anker in the Rivers mouth the two shippes , the River being twenty leagues in , where the Portugals roade : hee came thither the five and twentieth , and dispatched his businesse , and so returned with two Caravels , loaden with Negros ...
Page 23
... anker . Not two dayes after the comming of the two ships thither , they put their water caske a shore , and filled it with water , to season the same , thinking to have filled it with fresh water afterward : and while their men were ...
... anker . Not two dayes after the comming of the two ships thither , they put their water caske a shore , and filled it with water , to season the same , thinking to have filled it with fresh water afterward : and while their men were ...
Page 37
... anker - hold , sometimes a whole day and a night we turned up and downe ; and this happened not once , but halfe a dozen times in the space of our being there . 1565 . Great numbers of wilde dogs . The 16. wee passed by an yland called ...
... anker - hold , sometimes a whole day and a night we turned up and downe ; and this happened not once , but halfe a dozen times in the space of our being there . 1565 . Great numbers of wilde dogs . The 16. wee passed by an yland called ...
Page 46
... anker , and made saile toward Cuba , whither we came the sixt A hill called day , and weathered as farre as the Table , being a hill so called , because of the forme thereof : here we lay the Table . 1565 . Havana . off and on all night ...
... anker , and made saile toward Cuba , whither we came the sixt A hill called day , and weathered as farre as the Table , being a hill so called , because of the forme thereof : here we lay the Table . 1565 . Havana . off and on all night ...
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The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of ..., Part 1 Richard Hakluyt No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
aboord anker barke Berreo boat Cabo called Canoas Cape Captaine Carapana caried Cartagena chanell citie coast comming countrey Cruz Cuba dayes departed divers Domingo Dominica doth East enemie English entred farre fathome fleete Francis Drake frigats gallies Generall golde Governour Guiana harbour hath Havana Hispaniola Iago Indians Island Isle king land leagues litle lyeth majestie moneth mountaines neere Negros night Nombre de Dios North Northeast Nueva Espanna ordinance Orenoque Peru pinnesse port Puerto Bello Puerto rico rest returne river saile sayd sayle selfe sent shew shippes ships shoald shore shot side Sierras sight sir Francis Drake Sir Walter Ralegh souldiers South Southwest Spaine Spaniards Spanish standeth stirre thence thereof thither Thomas Baskervil thou shalt goe Tierra firma tooke towne Trinidad Truxillo tunnes Ullua unto victuals voyage warre West Indies winde yeere yere yland