Book contents
- Frontmatter
- EDITOR's PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION
- LETTER FROM THE LORD DELAWARR
- THE FIRST BOOKE
- BOOK THE SECOND
- CAPUT I Of the first discoverie in generall of America, being certain islands belonging to the mayne, by Columbus, anno 1492; of the discoverie of the mayne, or continent to the so-ward, by Vesputius Americus, anno 1497, who gave it to name America; of Cabot his discoverie from Florida norward, for the behoof of King Henry VII, anno 1495
- CAPUT II Of the discovery, more in perticuler, of the country of Wingandecoa and the isle of Roanoak, by Capt. Amadas and Capt. Barlow, for the behoofe of Sir W. Raleigh, who, presenting their travailes therein, and the cart of the coast to her Majestie, baptized the country by the name of Virginia
- CAPUT III Sir Richard Grenvile, generall of the first colonie of one hundred howsehoulders
- CAPUT V The unfaithfulnes of such who were imployed miscarried the colony
- CAPUT VI The success of the good ship called the Concord, set forth by the Earle of Southampton, and commaunded by Capt. Bartholomew Gosnoll, for discovery, upon a right lyne, falling about Sachadehoc
- CAPUT VII Capt. George Weymouth's voyage, upon a right lyne (not seeking the wynde in the accustomed height of the West Indies), and falling with Sachadehoc, and the discovery of that river
- CAPUT VIII A colonie sent out to settle, within the river of Sachadehoc, by the Honourable Sir John Popham, Knight, Lord Chief Justice of England, under the government of Capt. Popham and Capt. Gilbert; of the Spaniards surprising of a ship of Bristoll, sent for the use of the colonie
- CAPUT IX Of some accidents happening in the firste setlement of this northerne colonie
- CAPUT X The death of Capt. Popham; Capt. Gilbert disposeth of himself for England when the companie woud then stay no longer, albeit Capt. Davies returned unto them with a great supply from England
- A DICTIONARIE OF THE INDIAN LANGUAGE
- Index
- Plate section
CAPUT I - Of the first discoverie in generall of America, being certain islands belonging to the mayne, by Columbus, anno 1492; of the discoverie of the mayne, or continent to the so-ward, by Vesputius Americus, anno 1497, who gave it to name America; of Cabot his discoverie from Florida norward, for the behoof of King Henry VII, anno 1495
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- EDITOR's PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION
- LETTER FROM THE LORD DELAWARR
- THE FIRST BOOKE
- BOOK THE SECOND
- CAPUT I Of the first discoverie in generall of America, being certain islands belonging to the mayne, by Columbus, anno 1492; of the discoverie of the mayne, or continent to the so-ward, by Vesputius Americus, anno 1497, who gave it to name America; of Cabot his discoverie from Florida norward, for the behoof of King Henry VII, anno 1495
- CAPUT II Of the discovery, more in perticuler, of the country of Wingandecoa and the isle of Roanoak, by Capt. Amadas and Capt. Barlow, for the behoofe of Sir W. Raleigh, who, presenting their travailes therein, and the cart of the coast to her Majestie, baptized the country by the name of Virginia
- CAPUT III Sir Richard Grenvile, generall of the first colonie of one hundred howsehoulders
- CAPUT V The unfaithfulnes of such who were imployed miscarried the colony
- CAPUT VI The success of the good ship called the Concord, set forth by the Earle of Southampton, and commaunded by Capt. Bartholomew Gosnoll, for discovery, upon a right lyne, falling about Sachadehoc
- CAPUT VII Capt. George Weymouth's voyage, upon a right lyne (not seeking the wynde in the accustomed height of the West Indies), and falling with Sachadehoc, and the discovery of that river
- CAPUT VIII A colonie sent out to settle, within the river of Sachadehoc, by the Honourable Sir John Popham, Knight, Lord Chief Justice of England, under the government of Capt. Popham and Capt. Gilbert; of the Spaniards surprising of a ship of Bristoll, sent for the use of the colonie
- CAPUT IX Of some accidents happening in the firste setlement of this northerne colonie
- CAPUT X The death of Capt. Popham; Capt. Gilbert disposeth of himself for England when the companie woud then stay no longer, albeit Capt. Davies returned unto them with a great supply from England
- A DICTIONARIE OF THE INDIAN LANGUAGE
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Whether that ever famous Genoese, Christopher Columbus, were sufficiently learned, that by reading of divine allegories, named Timœus, of Plato, whose subject is of the universall nature and frame of the whole world, under the person of a subtile and misterious priest, old Cricia, of Egypt, discoursing to Solon, an auncient and superannuat history of an island, in tyme of great antiquity, called Athlantides, lying to the west, by which Columbus might instruct his laboring understanding with a greater cliernes, that more then probable yt was the sun and moone, and all ye faier eyes of heaven, did not looke downe from above, nor shedd their influence uppon the things put under the beames of the wandring and lowest plannett confyned only to Europe, Asia, and Africa, running thereby half their courses without proffitt and in vaine, shyning upon the solitary waters and desolate places empty and desolate of man and other living creatures; or whether Columbus, being a great cosmographer, did well observe, that Asia, Europe, and Africk, concerning the longitude of the world, did conteyn in them but 180 visible degrees, and therefore did conceave yt to be most likely, that in the other 180 (which filleth up the whole course of the sun to the nomber of 360 degrees, as well observe our moderne writers intreating de America sive orbe novo) God would not suffer the waters only to possesse all, but would leave a place for the habitation of men, beasts, flying, and creeping creatures; or whether Columbus, by his entertaynment of a Biscan pilot.
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- Historie of Travaile into Virginia Britannia; Expressing the Cosmographie and Comodities of the Country, Together with the Manners and Customes of the PeopleAs Collected by William Strachey, Gent., the First Secretary of the Colony, pp. 137 - 142Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1849