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Kupe’s Sails
Robert Jenkin wrote: After reading the 2007 New Zealand Book Award History prize-winning book Vaka Moana (2006, K.Howe ed.) and Atholl Anderson’s chapters of the 2015 Royal Society of New Zealand Science Book prize-winning book Tangata Whenua I think I understand … Continue reading
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The acquisitive gaze – colonialism and post-colonialism
Robert Jenkin wrote: Can present day New Zealanders, descendants of the colonisers and the colonised, construct a post-colonial and more bi-cultural view of our shared history; can we assess the story of the first recorded meeting between Maori and Europeans … Continue reading
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The Mysterious Eastland Revealed
Michael Ross has kindly agreed to our adding his article The Mysterious Eastland Revealed (The Globe #53 (2002), Ross, M, ‘The mysterious Eastland revealed’, p.1-22.) as another Tasman related ‘resource’ on this site. It was an internationally peer reviewed paper … Continue reading
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Is there stylistic evidence of more than one SAC illustration copyist
Robert Jenkin wrote: Till very recently I speculated that some of the later SAC illustrations, including ‘people of Island Moa Iamna and other surrounding islands’ and ‘Thus appears the vessel of Noua Guinea and people dwelling therein’ might have been … Continue reading
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Was Gilsemans really Tasman’s primary draughtsman?
Who was the expedition’s primary draughtsman, and was there more than one? Some commentators have attributed ‘A View of Murderers’ Bay’ to Isaac Gilsemans. On August 1st 1642 Gilsemans was described as having “fair knowledge of seafaring, and the drawing … Continue reading
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Wharawharangi Beach
One interesting point which Mack’s sketch map of Wainui Bay and Wharawharangi beach draws attention to is that the first likely ‘watering place’ the small boats would have seen was at Wharawharangi Beach. Why would they go straight past it, … Continue reading
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Witsen’s other images
In the Bulletin of the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology (2014), 38, A possible pre-Tasman canoe landing site, or tauranga waka, in Golden Bay, South Island, New Zealand (2014), Mack and Hawarden state that “Witsen (1705: 172) includes four images … Continue reading
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Historical illustrations as a source of written history
Contemporary illustrations of past events can and do complement written history, and much may yet be learned, as Patricia Wallace has shown in her 2006 article ‘Traditional Maori Dress: Recovery of a Seventeenth–Century Style?’, from illustrations that appear in the State … Continue reading
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Confirming Anderson’s location of Tasman’s D’Urville anchorage
In The Voyages of Abel Janszoon Tasman, 1968, Andrew Sharp did not attempted to exactly locate Tasman’s 1642 anchorage between Dec 21st and 26th. Instead he cautiously observed: “It is difficult to relate the positions in the drawing … and … Continue reading
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