Verlag: Büchergilde Gutenberg (2007)., Frankfurt;Zürich;Wien:, 2007
Anbieter: Antiquariat Steinwedel, Betzendorf, Deutschland
fester Einband. 645 (2) Seiten, mit zahlreichen farb. Abbildungen (im Text, ganzseitige und z.T. doppelseitige), O.Ln., 4° ISBN 978-3-7632-5868-0 // sehr guter Zustand.
Verlag: London: Printed for B.White, J.Robson, P.Elmsly, and G.Robinson, 1777., 1777
Anbieter: D & E LAKE LTD. (ABAC/ILAB), Toronto, ON, Kanada
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 1st Edition. 2 Volumes. 4to. pp. xviii, [2], 602; 2 p.l., 607. without the errata leaf at the end of Vol. I. folding engraved map (frontis.). An attractive set in contemporary sprinkled calf, neatly rebacked, corners renewed, spines tooled in gilt (Vol. I title-leaf professionally remargined at lower edge & upper outer corner with small repair, marginal repair to GG2-3 affecting part of headline, occasional spotting). First Edition of this important account of Cook s second voyage, which preceded the publication of the official record by some six weeks. The author and his father, Johann Reinhold, served as naturalists on the expedition. While the elder Forster was originally to have written the account, he was forbidden to do so because of a dispute with the Admiralty concerning his emoluments. It is based on his journal and also draws from Cook s own although no acknowledgement is given. Humboldt said that he was indebted to this work more so than to any other for his early love of nature and tropical beauty. On his second, and historically most important voyage, Cook determined that the Terra Australis Incognita , which supposedly lay between New Zealand and South America did not exist, and accomplished the first crossing of the Antarctic Circle. Cook revisited New Zealand, and discovered, or re-explored and charted many of the islands in the Pacific, including Easter Island, the Marquesas, Tahita and the Society Islands, the Tonga Islands, the New Hebrides, and New Caledonia. A vast amount of scientific and ethnographical information was gathered, and as a result of new techniques developed by Cook, not one crew member on the voyage died from scurvy, a remarkable achievement for the time and for which Cook was awarded the Copley gold medal. Beddie 1247. Cox I p. 60. Hill p. 108. Hocken pp. 16-17. Holmes 23. Kroepelien 450. O Reilly-Reitman 382. Sabin 25140. Spence 464.
Öfversättning. Nyköping : J. P. Hammarin, 1795. Octavo (170 x 107 mm), disbound; pp. 96 (including title-page); text in Swedish; scattered light foxing, avertical tear in the fore-edge margin of p. 15; title-page with contemporary ink signature. Slightly abridged Swedish translation (byCarl Fr. Landell) of Forster's 1793 German version of the voyage account of Surville, theFrench East India Company captain who sailed in search of Davis Land, a fabled island in the South Pacific, in 1769-70. Towards the end of 1769 the ships of Surville and Cook, on his first voyage, narrowly missed an encounter in New Zealand waters. Du Rietz,Bibliotheca Polynesiana, 448.