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Book Description hardcover. Condition: Gut. Seiten; Ausgabe von 1991, Artikel stammt aus Nichtraucherhaushalt! BN9351 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 500. Seller Inventory # 1155327
Book Description Hardback. 1998. Revised edition. A fine, unmarked copy in illustrated boards. Scans available if required. Seller Inventory # 12844054
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 2nd Edition. Very Good Condition with some shelf wear and some slight darkening to Page Edges from age and handling. Includes bibliography and index. 1998. 8vo., (Perth, Scott Four Colour Print) Second Edition, pictorial endpapers; pictorial boards, revised version of the original edition of 1982. Laminated boards, maps, colour and b&w illust., pp. xv, 384. For many years the history of Australia was Anglo-centric; although some regard was given to the Dutch accidental discovery of the western coast, Torres' fortuitous passage through the strait that carries his name, and French activity in the late 1700s and early 1800s, the focus has been on Cook's discovery of eastern Australia, the first settlement with convicts by the English, the mapping of the coastline by Flinders and the subsequent settlement around the rim of the island. This landmark book looks at the story from the French perspective. The author delved into many of the French archives, revealing any details of voyages of scientific and navigational discovery by de Gonneville, de Lozier, Dufresne, Baudin, Hamelin, D'Entrecastreaux, Freycinet, Bouganville and D'Urville. Firstly, the hunt for search for the southern land, then the missed opportunities of Baudin and the remarkable activities led by Hamelin in mapping and exploring the southwest of western Australia and Shark Bay, and finally the search for a suitable penal colony. In the end, before the English realised it, they abandoned plans to send convicts to Australia, and focussed on New Zealand. In the meantime, by then out-of-date English fears of the French led to them taking possession of western Australia and forming a settlement in Albany. The book is rich with detail, with many maps and images. The last 120 or so pages are filled with extra maps and images, bibliography, and most remarkably a list of almost 250 geographic landmarks in Australia that were either named my the French explorers, or later named in honour of them. Seller Inventory # 000464