Travel and Colonial Encounter

Pages

  • A True and Exact History of the Island of BarbadosRichard Ligon's 1657 account of colonial Barbados — sugar plantations, natural history, enslaved peoples, and island society, written from debtor's prison.
  • A Voyage into TartaryA Frenchman's extraordinary account of his travels through Greece, Turkey, and into the remote interior of Tartary — a rare 17th-century travel narrative of wild adventure and philosophical curiosity.
  • A Voyage into the LevantSir Henry Blount's account of his journey through the Ottoman Empire in 1634 — from Venice through Dalmatia, Bosnia, Hungary, Thrace, Rhodes, and Egypt to Grand Cairo — with observations on Turkish religion, government, and customs.
  • A Voyage to St. KildaMartin Martin's 1698 account of sailing to St. Kilda, the most remote inhabited island in the Hebrides — a firsthand portrait of a people who had never seen a tree, thought writing was sorcery, and lived in the innocence the poets only feigned for the Golden Age.
  • Dampiers New Voyage Round the WorldWilliam Dampier's circumnavigation of the globe (1679–1691) — the pirate-naturalist who inspired Robinson Crusoe, Gulliver's Travels, and Darwin's Beagle voyage. The book that made the English-speaking world look outward.
  • The Baptized TurkA Narrative of the Happy Conversion of Signior Rigep Dandulo, from Islam to Christianity in Restoration England (1658).
  • The History of LaplandPreface and Chapters I–XI of Johannes Scheffer's 1674 ethnographic masterwork on the Sami people — the first scholarly study of Sami religion and magic, commissioned by the Chancellor of Sweden. Chapters XII–XXXV continue in the companion file.
  • The History of Lapland — Chapters XII-XXXVChapters XII–XXXV of Johannes Scheffer's 1674 account of Lapland and the Sami people — government, language, dress, diet, hunting, marriage, wildlife, and natural resources.
  • The Life of Tamerlane the GreatSamuel Clarke's 1664 biography of Tamerlane (Timur), the Tartar conqueror — a vivid Early Modern English account of his wars against Moscow, China, Bajazet the Turk, Egypt, and Persia, drawn from Arabic and European sources.
  • The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary RowlandsonMary Rowlandson's narrative of her captivity during King Philip's War (1675–76) — the first bestselling book in American literature, a Puritan woman's account of eleven weeks among the Narragansett, Nipmuc, and Wampanoag during one of the most devastating conflicts in colonial New England.
  • The Rare Adventures and Painefull PeregrinationsA Scottish traveller's account of nineteen years and thirty-six thousand miles on foot across Europe, Asia, and Africa, including his torture by the Spanish Inquisition.
  • The Strange and Dangerous Voyage of Captaine Thomas JamesCaptain Thomas James's 1633 journal of his harrowing voyage into Hudson Bay in search of the Northwest Passage — storms, ice, starvation, and near-death wintering on Charleton Island.