The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English…

(7 User reviews)   1746
By Sylvia Perez Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Yoga
Hakluyt, Richard, 1552?-1616 Hakluyt, Richard, 1552?-1616
English
Okay, hear me out. Imagine a book that isn't a single story, but a massive collection of real letters, diaries, and reports from the 1500s. It's like finding a dusty chest in your attic, but instead of old sweaters, it's full of wild, firsthand accounts of English sailors, merchants, and explorers. They're sailing into the complete unknown, getting into scrapes with foreign kings, surviving shipwrecks, and trying to figure out how to get rich off spices and silk. The main 'conflict' is humanity versus a planet we didn't understand—filled with real monsters (or so they thought), unpredictable oceans, and cultures that seemed utterly alien. This isn't a polished history book. It's the raw, messy, and sometimes unbelievable chatter from the edge of the world, straight from the people who were there. It makes you realize how terrifying and exciting it must have been when maps still had drawings of sea serpents in the blank spots.
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Let's be clear: This is not a novel. You don't follow one hero from start to finish. Instead, think of Richard Hakluyt as the ultimate hype-man and archivist for the English Age of Discovery. His life's work was collecting every scrap of information he could find about English voyages. The book is his mega-compilation. He gathered sailors' logs, merchants' ledgers, ambassadors' letters, and captains' reports. He put them all together to prove a point: England could and should be a major global power, competing with Spain and Portugal.

The Story

There isn't a plot in the traditional sense. The 'story' is the unfolding of the English worldview, one risky voyage at a time. You'll read about John Cabot claiming Newfoundland for England. You'll get the gritty details of trade missions to Russia and the Ottoman Empire, where negotiations were tense and the profit margins were everything. You'll follow Martin Frobisher's troubled quest for a Northwest Passage, complete with descriptions of 'black ore' he hoped was gold (it wasn't). You'll see early, often clumsy, attempts to plant colonies in the Americas. It's a mosaic of ambition, courage, greed, and frequent failure, told in the language of the time.

Why You Should Read It

Reading this is like having a time machine. The magic isn't in Hakluyt's commentary, but in the unfiltered voices he preserved. You get the sheer wonder in a sailor's description of seeing a walrus for the first time ('a sea monster'). You feel the tension in a merchant's letter as he worries his cargo will spoil. The prejudices and assumptions of the era are right there on the page, uncensored. It removes the glossy sheen of legend from figures like Sir Francis Drake and shows them as practical, sometimes ruthless, men operating with limited knowledge. It makes history feel immediate, human, and incredibly fragile.

Final Verdict

This is a book for the curious and the patient. It's perfect for history lovers who are tired of reading modern interpretations and want to get as close to the source as possible. It's for anyone fascinated by exploration, geography, or the sheer audacity of pre-modern travel. Don't try to read it cover-to-cover like a novel. Dip in and out. Pick a region or a traveler that interests you and dive into their account. It's a challenging, rewarding, and uniquely authentic window into the moment England stepped onto the world stage.



🟢 Legal Disclaimer

This title is part of the public domain archive. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Jackson Clark
1 year ago

This book was worth my time since the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Don't hesitate to start reading.

Lisa Robinson
1 year ago

I didn't expect much, but it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. One of the best books I've read this year.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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