Beschreibung:

XVII; XVIII; 447 Seiten; Illustr. (auch farbig); graph. Darst.; Karten; 27 cm. Originalleinen mit farb. illustr. Orig.-Umschlag.

Bemerkung:

Gutes Exemplar; Umschlag m. kl. Preisschild; etwas berieben sowie mit kl. Läsuren. - Reprint / Nachdruck der Ausgabe London, T. Cadell / W. Davies; 1806 : A Voyage to Cochinchina, in the Years 1792 and 1793. - Englisch. - Sir John Barrow, 1. Baronet (* 19. Juni 1764 in Dragley Beck, Ulverston, Cumbria; ? 23. November 1848 in London) war ein britischer Staatsbeamter und Geschichtsschreiber. Als zweiter Sekretär der Admiralität organisierte er während der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts zahlreiche Entdeckungsreisen in verschiedene Weltregionen, von Afrika bis ins Nordmeer, um die nach dem Sieg über Napoleon arbeitslos gewordenen britischen Marineoffiziere zu beschäftigen. ? (wiki) // Originally published in 1806 A Voyage to Cochinchina reflects the interest of that period in travel to distant places in all parts of the world. About half of the book is devoted to Java and Viet-Nam, while there is lengthy account of a journey to the interior of southern Africa, as well as descriptions of Madeira, the Canary Islands, Rio de Janeiro and Tristan da Cunha. The book therefore takes its place in this series as a superior travel book which provides valuable description and a sense of period. Both its author, Sir John Barrow, and the book were well known in the early nineteenth century, when his observations on South-East Asia were highly regarded by writers and travellers. The glimpses A Voyage to Cochinchina offers of life in Viet-Nam and the sharply delineated picture of Dutch colonial society in Batavia remain of great interest to the modern historian. Mention must also be made of the fine coloured aquatint plates which form such a valuable part of the original publication, representing as they do some of the earliest European pictorial records of Javanese and Vietnamese everyday life. All of them have been included in the reprint and much of the delicacy of the original colouring has been retained. (Verlagstext) // INHALT (Auszug) : ... Cochinchinese Dinners ---- Communication with the young King of Tung-quin ---- Presents sent by him to the Ambassador ---- -Entertainment given at Turon en the King of England's Birth-Day ---- Plays and other Amusements ---- Activity of the Cochinchinese ---- How they agree and disagree with the Chinese ---- Treatment of their Women ---- Consequences of it ---- Easy Terms on which Women are transferred to Strangers ---- Instances of it ---- Dress ---- Buildings ---- Diet and Means of Subsistence ---- Extensive Use of marine Productions as Articles of Food ---- Low State of the Arts and Manufactures ---- Excel most in naval Architecture ---- Language ---- Religion ---- Laws the same as those of China ---- Punishments not so frequent ---- Peninsula and Harbour qf Turon ---- Views of France in desiring the Cession of it ---- Importance of to Great Britains particularly in its Commerce with China ---- Cochinchinese Productions for Export ---- Mode of establishing an Intercourse with this Nation ---- Objections against entrusting diplomatic Agency to mercantile Men ---- Ancient Commerce with Cochinchina ---- Reason of its Decline owing to the ill Conduct of Europeans ---- An extraordinary Instance of Cruelty ---- Chinese Trade to New Holland ---- Superior Advantages resulting from their early Knowledge of the Compass ---- An Objection to its Antiquity answered ---- An Opening for Great Britain to revive the Trade of Cochinchina ---- (u.v.v.a.) ISBN 0195802810