1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910811333003321

Autore

Barratt Glynn

Titolo

Russia and the South Pacific, 1696-1840 . Volume 2 Southern and Eastern Polynesia / / Glynn Barratt

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Vancouver, : University of British Columiba Press, 1988

ISBN

1-283-22619-7

9786613226198

0-7748-5684-X

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xx, 302 pages) : illustrations

Collana

University of British Columbia Press Pacific maritime studies series ; ; 7

Disciplina

990

Soggetti

Soviet Union History

Soviet Union History, Naval

Polynesia Discovery and exploration Russian

Easter Island Discovery and exploration Russian

New Zealand Discovery and exploration Russian

Austral Islands (French Polynesia) Discovery and exploration Russian

Soviet Union Relations Polynesia

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographies and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

Front Matter -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Introduction -- Easter Island -- Preparations for a Voyage -- The Russian Texts -- The Scientific Legacy -- New Zealand -- Earlier Russian Knowledge of New Zealand, 1692-1814 -- The Russians in New Zealand -- The Russian Ethnographic Record for Queen Charlotte Sound, 1820 -- Envoi: Scientific and Political Developments, 1828-32 -- The Austral Islands -- The Bellingshausen Contacts, 1820 -- The Russian Texts -- Reflections on the Ethnographic Evidence -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Name Index -- Place Index -- Ship Index

Sommario/riassunto

The second volume in Glynn Barratt's projected quartet on the naval, scientific, and social activities of the Imperial Russian Navy in the South Pacific, this book describes Russian activities in New Zealand, the Austral Islands and Easter Island. These widely scattered areas were all visited by warships of the Russian navy and by companies of highly



educated and observant officers and "gentlemen of science" in the early 1800's. Barratt's annotated and careful translations of the visitors' eyewitness accounts provide fascinating, sometimes amusing, reading about the landfalls of the ships. The Russians' journals, reports, and drawings are collated with artefacts collected on the spot and with contemporaneous European data to produce a vivid picture of life and culture in these parts of the South Pacific in the early post-contact period. Although available in Soviet archives, many of the primary sources that Barratt has examined for this book have until now been almost completely ignored by Western scholars in spite of their importance in understanding the changes that took place in post-contact Oceania. These archival holdings, as described by the author, will be of major importance to those interested in the history and ethnohistory of southern and eastern Polynesia.