Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 609

Hawkins, Richard

Estimate
£10,000 - £15,000
ca. US$16,307 - US$24,461
Price realised:
£25,000
ca. US$40,769
Auction archive: Lot number 609

Hawkins, Richard

Estimate
£10,000 - £15,000
ca. US$16,307 - US$24,461
Price realised:
£25,000
ca. US$40,769
Beschreibung:

Hawkins, Richard THE OBSERVATIONS OF SIR RICHARD HAWKINS KNIGHT, IN HIS VOYAGE INTO THE SOUTH SEA. ANNO DOMINI 1593. LONDON: I.D. FOR J. IAGGARD, 1622 FIRST EDITION, folio (270 x 175mm.), [6], 170, [6]pp., limp vellum by W. Pratt for H. Stevens (dated 1868), yap edges, red label ''One of the most graphic and readable of all Tudor narratives... a dramatic story of a gallant failure, written with strong descriptive power and imagination'' (Boies Penrose). Over 100 years were to pass before there were any further English trading voyages in the Pacific. The author was the only son of the famous Sir John Hawkins, and like him greatly distinguished himself at the defeat of the Spanish Armada. His next employment was the voyage recounted here. While coasting up the western side of South America he encountered a Spanish squadron of superior strength, to which, after making a brave resistance and receiving some severe wounds, he was obliged to yield. He was taken prisoner, and did not regain his liberty for many years, which accounts for the lapse of time between the date of his Voyage (1593) and this publication of his experiences. He died in 1622, either just before or after the publication of his book. The volume contains some interesting details regarding the Indians of Florida and the Caribbean Islands, and parts of South America.

Auction archive: Lot number 609
Beschreibung:

Hawkins, Richard THE OBSERVATIONS OF SIR RICHARD HAWKINS KNIGHT, IN HIS VOYAGE INTO THE SOUTH SEA. ANNO DOMINI 1593. LONDON: I.D. FOR J. IAGGARD, 1622 FIRST EDITION, folio (270 x 175mm.), [6], 170, [6]pp., limp vellum by W. Pratt for H. Stevens (dated 1868), yap edges, red label ''One of the most graphic and readable of all Tudor narratives... a dramatic story of a gallant failure, written with strong descriptive power and imagination'' (Boies Penrose). Over 100 years were to pass before there were any further English trading voyages in the Pacific. The author was the only son of the famous Sir John Hawkins, and like him greatly distinguished himself at the defeat of the Spanish Armada. His next employment was the voyage recounted here. While coasting up the western side of South America he encountered a Spanish squadron of superior strength, to which, after making a brave resistance and receiving some severe wounds, he was obliged to yield. He was taken prisoner, and did not regain his liberty for many years, which accounts for the lapse of time between the date of his Voyage (1593) and this publication of his experiences. He died in 1622, either just before or after the publication of his book. The volume contains some interesting details regarding the Indians of Florida and the Caribbean Islands, and parts of South America.

Auction archive: Lot number 609
Try LotSearch

Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!

  • Search lots and bid
  • Price database and artist analysis
  • Alerts for your searches
Create an alert now!

Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.

Create an alert