Sir Walter Oakeshott was a British scholar who is best known as the discoverer of the Winchester Manuscript of Malory's Morte d'Arthur while he was an assistant master at Winchester College. He later became Rector of Lincoln College, and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1962 to 1964. Oakeshott had a scholarly interest in Elizabethan exploration, which he examines in this volume, first published in 1942. He describes the military and exploratory achievements of the Elizabethan and Stuart navy, including attempts to find the Northwest Passage, the settlement of Virginia and the defeat of the Spanish Armada. Oakeshott also discusses the role of Renaissance thought and contemporary politics in these achievements, through changes in naval tactics and advances in cartography. The personalities of leading explorers including Sir Francis Drake, Sir John Hawkins and Sir Walter Raleigh are also vividly described in this clear and concise historical account.
This classic work traces the history of sea exploration and innovation, from ancient times to the Industrial Revolution. With detailed descriptions of pivotal voyages, nautical inventions, and...
A Steamy High Seas Novella Eliza has been betrayed by every man she has ever known. After years of planning and saving, she finally has enough to escape the brothel life and sail to the Americas...
An important contribution to the history of the American South, this volume collects a series of essays that shed new light on the founding and early years of the colony of Georgia. Including...
"Please," she begged. Karina didn't know what she begged for, maybe for the flare to do its work or, maybe, for the pain to stop. She never saw which way the flare headed. A coughing fit that ended...