The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation: Made by Sea Or Overland to the Remote & Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compasse of These 1600 Yeares, Volume 3J.M. Dent & Sons, 1907 |
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Page 1
... shewed from the beginning , how the Turkes have increased in power , what realmes they had conquered , what people they had subdued even to that day . He declared further what actes the great Turke then living had done ; and in ...
... shewed from the beginning , how the Turkes have increased in power , what realmes they had conquered , what people they had subdued even to that day . He declared further what actes the great Turke then living had done ; and in ...
Page 22
... shewed them to be yet by west of Jaffa . Thus we remained all that night at anker , and the farther west that we sayled , the lesse water we had . The 21 we set sayle againe , and kept our course Northeast , but because we would not goe ...
... shewed them to be yet by west of Jaffa . Thus we remained all that night at anker , and the farther west that we sayled , the lesse water we had . The 21 we set sayle againe , and kept our course Northeast , but because we would not goe ...
Page 39
... shewed themselves men in deed , in working manfully with their browne bils and halbardes : where the owner , master , boateswaine , and their company stoode to it so lustily , that the Turkes were halfe dis- maied . But chiefly the ...
... shewed themselves men in deed , in working manfully with their browne bils and halbardes : where the owner , master , boateswaine , and their company stoode to it so lustily , that the Turkes were halfe dis- maied . But chiefly the ...
Page 46
... shewed himselfe a God indeed , and that he was the onely living God for the seas were swift under his faithfull , which made the enemies agast to behold them , a skilfuller Pilot leades them , and their mariners bestirre them lustily ...
... shewed himselfe a God indeed , and that he was the onely living God for the seas were swift under his faithfull , which made the enemies agast to behold them , a skilfuller Pilot leades them , and their mariners bestirre them lustily ...
Page 48
... shewed all his travell unto the Councell who considering of the state of this man , in that hee had spent and lost a great part of his youth in thraldome and bondage , extended to him their liberalitie , to helpe to maintaine him now in ...
... shewed all his travell unto the Councell who considering of the state of this man , in that hee had spent and lost a great part of his youth in thraldome and bondage , extended to him their liberalitie , to helpe to maintaine him now in ...
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Common terms and phrases
aboord aforesaid againe Aleppo Alexandria alwayes Ambassadour anker Babylon Balsara barke Bengala boat called Cambaia Candia Captaine Carovan cary castle Cephalonia Chaul Chio Christians citie cloth coast Cochin commandement commeth comming Constantinople Consul contrary countrey custome dayes journey depart divers dominions doth Eliphants England English faire foorth gallies goeth golde Governour and companie Grand Signior graunt hath highnesse Iland Indies John Fox John Newbery king kingdome lade land letters Levant litle Majestie Malacca maner marchandise marchants Master Mecca miles moneth monson Moores neere night Ormus Ormuz passed Pegu port Portugales Portugals prison Ralph Fitch realme Richard river saile sayd sayd Governour sayled sent Serifo shewed ship shippe side sonne sort standeth sunne thence thereof thing thither towne trade traffike traffique Tripolis Turkes unto Venetians Venice victuals voyage warre wherein winde yeere yere Zante
Popular passages
Page ii - WILL BE PLEASED TO SEND FREELY TO ALL APPLICANTS A LIST OF THE PUBLISHED AND PROJECTED VOLUMES TO BE COMPRISED UNDER THE FOLLOWING TWELVE HEADINGS...
Page 64 - Elizabeth, by the grace of God Queene of England, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc.
Page 286 - Here bee many marchants of all nations. And the Fleete which commeth every yeere from Portugal, which be foure, five, or sixe great shippes, commeth first hither. And they come for the most part in September, and remaine there fortie or fiftie dayes ; and then goe to Cochin, where they lade their Pepper for Portugall.
Page 384 - York in these presents is not made or any statute, act, ordinance, provision, proclamation or restriction heretofore had, made, enacted, ordained or provided, or any other matter cause or thing whatsoever to the Contrary thereof in any wise Notwithstanding.
Page 384 - ... or any other thing, cause, or matter whatsoever, in any wise notwithstanding.] In witnesse wherof [we have caused these our letters to be made patents...
Page 304 - ... their word. If the broker pay you not at his day, you may take him home, and keep him in your house, which is a great shame for him. And if he pay you not presently, you may take his wife and children, and his slaves, and bind them at your door, and set them in the sun ; for this is the law of the country.
Page 293 - In their Winter, which is our May, the men weare quilted gownes of cotton like to our mattraces and quilted caps like to our great Grocers morters, with a slit to looke out at, and so tied downe beneath their eares.
Page 277 - Ormus, who, certaine dayes after our comming from thence, sent for mee into his chamber, and there beganne to demaund of me many things, to the which I answered : and amongst the rest, he said, that Master Drake was sent out of England with many ships, and came to Maluco, and there laded cloves, and finding a gallion there of the kings of Portugall, hee caused two pieces of his greatest ordinance to be shot at the same...
Page 302 - These people do eat roots, herbs, leaves, dogs, cats, rats, serpents and snakes ; they refuse almost nothing. When the king rideth abroad he rideth with a great guard and many noblemen ; oftentimes upon an elephant with a fine castle upon him very fairly gilded with gold, and sometimes upon a great frame like an...
Page 301 - ... runne in, for it is like a wood ; and when they be in, the gate doth shut. Afterward they get out the female ; and when the male seeth that he is left alone, he weepeth and crieth, and runneth against the...