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Admirals --- Amiraux --- Australian poetry --- Bligh, William,
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Bounty Mutiny, 1789 --- Bligh, William, --- Bounty (Ship) --- Pitcairn Island
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Mutinerie de la Bounty (1789) --- Admirals --- Bounty Mutiny, 1789. --- Bligh, William, --- Bligh, William, --- Bounty (Ship) --- Great Britain. --- Officers
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Bounty Mutiny, 1789. --- Morrison, James, --- Bligh, William, --- Christian, Fletcher, --- Bounty (Ship). --- Oceania --- Discovery and exploration.
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History of the United Kingdom and Ireland --- Bligh, William --- anno 1800-1899 --- Pitcairn Islands
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Book history --- Art --- boekkunst --- Bligh, William --- Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection [Washington, D.C.]
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" The names William Bligh, Fletcher Christian, and the Bounty have excited the popular imagination for more than two hundred years. On an April morning in 1789, near the island known today as Tonga, William Bligh and eighteen loyal seamen were expelled from the Bounty, and began what would be the greatest open-boat voyage in history, sailing some 4000 miles to safety in Timor. The mutineers, led by Fletcher Christian, sailed off into a mystery that has never been entirely resolved. Here, in one volume, are all the relevant texts and documents related to a drama that has fascinated generations: the full text of Blich's Narrative of the Mutiny, the minutes of the court proceedings gathered by Edward Christian in an effort to clear his brother's name, and the highly polemic correspondence between Bligh and Christian."
Bounty Mutiny, 1789. --- Bligh, William, --- Christian, Fletcher, --- Travel --- Bounty (Ship) --- Oceania --- Description and travel
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" Just before sunrise on the morning of April 28, 1789, in the far reaches of the South Pacific. Master's Mate Fletcher Christian and three other men, armed with cutlasses, bayonets and a musket, apprenhended Lieutenant William Bligh and placed him and eighteen officers and crewmen in a small boat. This mutiny on board His Majesty's armed transport Bounty impelled every man on a fateful course-Bligh and his loyalists on a historic boat voyage. Christian and his followers on their restless exile. Bligh himself returned to Britain as a hero, but that was not his final destiny. Ten of the Bounty's crew were eventually captured in Tahiti and brought back to irons to face their day in court, and it was in the dynamics and politics of their court-martial and its aftermath that the story we know-or think we know-as the mutiny on the Bounty was shaped. Caroline Alexander's last book. The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition, was a landmark recounting one of the last great adventures in the heroic age of exploration. Now she gives us the definitive and surprising account of one of the most infamous episodes in the history of seagoing voyages. The facts of the mutiny itself are told in Admiralty records, but for the truth behind the story, Alexander has ranged further, gleaning details from the wills, diaries and correspondence of figures not obviously connected to the events, from obscure news items and from the biographies and family pedigrees of seemingly minor players. She casts a radical new light on the events, on Bligh's character and on a welter of family connections and special interests that play crucial roles at different moments in the story. Using contemporary accounts, and particularly the mutineers' own testimony, she allows the men themselves to conjure the events and transport the reader back to the deck of the Bounty, to exotic islands in the South Pacific and to the back rooms of British naval power. Only when we look at the whole story, from before the Bounty left England until well after the death of the last participant, do we understand what happened and why. Combined vivid characterization and deft storytelling, Alexander shatters the centuries-old myths surrounding this story. She brilliantly shows how, in a desperate attempt to save one man from the gallows and another from ignominy, two powerful families came together and began to create the version of history we know today. The true story of the mutiny on the Bounty is an epic of duty and heroism, pride and power, and the assassination of a brave man's honor at the dawn of the Romantic age."
Bounty Mutiny, 1789. --- Bligh, William, --- Christian, Fletcher, --- Travel --- Bounty (Ship) --- Oceania --- Description and travel.
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Admirals --- Bounty Mutiny, 1789 --- Governors --- Mutiny --- Biography --- History --- Bligh, William, --- Great Britain. --- Biography.
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