Title: The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of The English Nation, Vol. 11
Author: Richard Hakluyt
Release Date: June 23, 2004 [eBook #12693]
Language: English, Latin, Spanish, and Italian
Character set encoding: Us-ASCII
***Start of the project gutenberg EBOOK the principal navigations, voyages, Traffiques, and discoveries of the English nation, vol. 11***
E-text prepared by Karl Hagen and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team from images generously made available by the Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions
** Transcriber’s Notes **
The printed edition from which this e-text has been produced retains the spelling and abbreviations of Hakluyt’s 16th-century original. In this version, the spelling has been retained, but the following manuscript abbreviations have been silently expanded:
- vowels with macrons = vowel + ‘n’ or ‘m’ - q; = -que (in the Latin) - y’e = the; y’t = that; w’t = with
This edition contains footnotes and two types of sidenotes. Most footnotes are added by the editor. They follow modern (19th-century) spelling conventions. Those that don’t are Hakluyt’s (and are not always systematically marked as such by the editor). The sidenotes are Hakluyt’s own. Summarizing sidenotes are labelled [Sidenote: ] and placed before the sentence to which they apply. Sidenotes that are keyed with a symbol are labeled [Marginal note: ] and placed at the point of the symbol, except in poetry, where they are placed at a convenient point. Additional notes on corrections, etc. are signed ‘KTH’
** End Transcriber’s Notes **
THE PRINCIPAL NAVIGATIONS, VOYAGES, TRAFFIQUES AND DISCOVERIES OF THE ENGLISH NATION, VOLUME XI
AFRICA
Collected by
Richard hakluyt, preacher.
AND
Edited by
Edmund Goldsmid, F.R.H.S.
Nauigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoueries
OF THE
English nation in Africa.
* * * * *
The voyage of Henrie Eatle of Derbie, after Duke of
Hereford, and lastly
Henry the fourth King of England, to Tunis
in Barbarie, with an army of
Englishmen mitten by Polidore Virgill.
pag. 1389.