The great prose epic of the Elizabethan period” with the rare suppressed ‘Voyage to Cadiz’

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The Principall Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation,

Made by Sea or Over-Land, to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth...

HAKLUYT, Richard
Imprinted at London
by George Bishop; Ralph Newberie and Robert Barker, Anno 1599–1600; and R.H. Evans,
1812
Four volumes, folio atlas (300 by 190mm), second edition, second issue, including the original printing of the suppressed 'Voyage to Cadiz' (1598, state II; ?supplied), [24], 619pp.; [16], 312pp. 204pp.; [16], 868pp.; [12], 807pp., without the Edward Wright world map, as usual, small rust hole to leaf **3 in vol. II, and one or two adjacent rust stains, finely bound in early nineteenth-century red straight-grained morocco by T. Brooks, with elaborate gilt and blind-tooled borders and gilt foliate cornerpieces, spines in six compartments separated by raised bands, richly gilt, gilt edges.
1004

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A very attractive example of the first collection of English voyages, published at the height of Elizabethan maritime prestige.

Comprising 243 narratives of voyages and travels in the New World in some 1,700,000 words, 'The Principall Navigations' is the greatest assemblage of travel accounts and navigations to all parts of the world collected up to its time, and a vital source for early New World exploration. "It is difficult to over rate the importance and valu...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Borba De Moraes, pp. 391–92; Church 322; Grolier English 100, 14; Hill 743; JCB (3) I:360–61; LOC European Americana 598/42; Penrose, Boies, 'Travel and Discovery in the Renaissance 1420–1620', p. 318; Pforzheimer 443; Printing and the Mind of Man 105; Quinn, p. 490; Sabin 29596, 29597, 29598, 29599; STC 12626.

provenance:

provenance: