Discovery and Empire
the French in the South Seas
Abstract
The French connection with the South Seas stretches back at least as far as the voyage of Binot Paulmier de Gonneville (1503-1505), who believed he had discovered the fabled great south land after being blown off course during a storm near the Cape of Good Hope. (...) It was not until the eighteenth century, however, that France began sending mariners to the southern oceans on a regular basis, and by that time a new maritime power had begun to emerge: Great Britain. Together, these two nations would play a decisive role in determining the configuration of these little known parts of the globe, and particularly of the Pacific, which had for so long been the almost exclusive preserve of Spain.
Keywords
jean fornasiero; australia; oceania; french perceptions; french voyages; pacific ocean; shino konishi; jacqueline dutton; penal colony; animal histories; nicole starbuck; british colony; baudin expedition; imperialism; port jackson; freycinet; rance; south seas; john gascoigne; british explorers; terra australis; margaret sankey; john west-sooby; baudin; aboriginal people; spanish perceptions; stephanie pfennigwerth; bougainville; abbé paulmier’s mémoires; age of the enlightenment; french explorers; senses; FranceDOI
10.20851/discoveryPublisher
University of Adelaide PressPublisher website
https://www.adelaide.edu.au/press/Publication date and place
2013Classification
Australasian and Pacific history