Terra Australis Cognita: Or, Voyages to the Terra Australis, or Southern Hemisphere. Vol. III
Creator
Date
1766-68
Identifier
de Beer Sb 1776 C
Publisher
Edinburgh: Printed by A. Donaldson
Abstract
Dutch explorers capitalized on the waning maritime influence of the Portuguese and Spanish. In 1605, Willem Janszoon van Amsterdam left from Java, and became the first European to discover Australia, so-called ‘New Holland’. In 1615, Willem C. Shouten and Jacques Le Maire left Holland and sailed round Cape Horn, for the first time in history, and thus disproved the long-held theory that Tierra del Fuego was part of a ‘Southern Continent’. They were the first Europeans to discover and name four islands, now part of the Tuamotu Archipelago. This map of the world from Callandar’s <i>Terra Australis Cognita</i> contains an incomplete ‘New Holland’, a barely distinguishable ‘New Zeland’, and Pacific islands known up to 1768.
Files
Citation
John Callander, “Terra Australis Cognita: Or, Voyages to the Terra Australis, or Southern Hemisphere. Vol. III,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed November 16, 2024, https://otago.ourheritage.ac.nz/index.php/items/show/6827.