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  1. The Arctic Voyages of Martin Frobisher: An Elizabethan Venture by Robert McGhee, 2001-12

61. 06 I The Early History Of Cuba 1492-1586 /i .
(London)frobisher martin; McKee A Robert WCH, 1972, Willem de Vlamingh's explorationof Australia Thompson JES, 1958, Thomas Gage's Travels to the new world.
http://cma.soton.ac.uk/HistShip/uwb06.htm
HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SHIP - General Bibliographies 06 BIOGRAPHIES
  • Allardyce A., Memoirs of Lord Keith . (London) [keith lord memoirs]
  • Anderson C.L.F., Life and Letters of Vasco Nunez de Balbao . (New York) [balbao vasco nunez letters]
  • Anderson R.C., Journals of Sir Thomas Allin. 2 Vols. 1666-78 . (London) [allin sir thomas]
  • Andrews K.R., Drake's Voyages . (London) [drake francis]
  • Anson W.V., Life of Lord Anson . (London) [anson life]
  • Bacon R.H., Life of Lord Fisher . (London) [fisher lord life]
  • Bacon R.H., Life of Earl Jellicoe . (London) [jellicoe earl life]
  • Barrow J., Life of Anson . (London) [anson life]
  • Barrow J., Captain Cook's Voyages of Discovery . (London) [cook james voyages]
  • Barrowe., Life of Howe . (London) [howe life]
  • Nelson's Hardy . (London) [hardy life]
  • Beadon R., Robert Blake . (London) [blake robert]
  • Beazley C.R., Prince Henry the Navigator . (New York) [henry navigator prince]
  • Beazley C.R., John and Sebastian Cabot . (London) [cabots life]
  • Bennett G., Nelson the Commander . (London) [nelson life]
  • Beresford C.

62. ReferenceResources:FamousExplorers
Gilbert, James Cook , Francis Drake, martin frobisher, John Franklin desire to explorethe world around them the History Channel takes new explorations into the
http://www.kidinfo.com/American_History/Explorers.html
Reference Resources: Famous Explorers
Explorer Sites A Treasure Trove of North American Exploration Accounts of European voyages and explorations to North America, from Columbus's Atlantic crossing in 1492 to the famous trip through the Northwest Passage by Roald Amundsen in 1905. Alphabetical Navigation permits browsing by explorers' names Discovery and Exploration Maps from the Library of Congress Documents the discovery and exploration of the Americas with both manuscripts and published maps. Many of these maps reflect the European Age of Discoveries, dating from the late 15th century to the 17th century when Europeans were concerned primarily with determining the outline of the continents as they explored and mapped the coastal areas and the major waterways. Also included are 18th and 19th century maps documenting the exploration and mapping of the interior parts of the continents, reflecting the work of Lewis and Clark and subsequent government explorers and surveyors. SEARCHABLE by Keyword or Creator Index

63. Explorations
worldworld—Geography—world Geography frobisher Bay, Explored 1, martin frobisher,English seaman, 1576. new Zealand, Explored, James Cook, English navigator, 1769.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0105831.html

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Explorations
See also Explorers
Country or place Event Explorer Date AFRICA Sierra Leone Explored Hanno , Carthaginian seaman c. 520 B.C. Zaire River (Congo) Mouth visited c. 1484 Cape of Good Hope Rounded Bartolomeu Diaz , Portuguese explorer Gambia River Explored Mungo Park , Scottish explorer Sahara Crossed Dixon Denham and Hugh Clapperton, English explorers Zambezi River Explored David Livingstone , Scottish explorer Sudan Explored Heinrich Barth , German explorer Victoria Falls Explored David Livingstone , Scottish explorer Lake Tanganyika Explored Richard Burton and John Speke , British explorers Lake Victoria, identified as the source of the Nile

64. Frobisher
martin frobisher, bedazzled by the new world , Smithsonian, vol.
http://www.fl.ulaval.ca/celat/frobisher.html
RECHERCHES ARCHÉOLOGIQUES SUR LES VOYAGES DE MARTIN FROBISHER (1576-1578) Dirigé par Réginald Auger Entre 1576 et 1578, l'explorateur anglais Martin Frobisher dirigea trois expéditions dans l'Arctique de l'est; le but de sa première expédition était de découvrir le passage du Nord-Ouest qui devait le conduire en Chine. Une carte géographique publiée à la même époque plaçait ce passage dans une zone tempérée au sud du cercle polaire. Comme c'était la coutume à l'époque, Frobisher rapporta des minerais lors de son premier voyage afin de prouver que l'expédition s'était bien aventurée dans des terres inconnues. Intrigué par la couleur que prenaient ces minerais après avoir été soumis à l'action du feu, Michael Lok, directeur de la compagnie de Muscovie, décida d'en apporter quelques échantillons à des alchimistes pour qu'ils vérifient leur teneur en métaux précieux, tels l'or et l'argent. Deux alchimistes conclurent que les minerais ne contenaient aucun métal précieux alors qu'un troisième considéra qu'ils renfermaient suffisamment d'or et d'argent pour qu'il vaille la peine d'entreprendre une autre expédition, dont le but serait d'en rapporter autant que possible. Bien que pour le moins équivoque, les résultats de ces tests sont la base des tout premiers projets d'extraction minière en Amérique du Nord.

65. British Maritime Enterprise In The New World
North America 1. The First Explorers (14801547) Bristol and the new world; JohnCabot (or 2. Birth of new Interests (1576-1590) martin frobisher and the
http://www.mellenpress.com/emp/mellenpress.cfm?bookid=3400&pc=9

66. Curriculum Transformation, Recommended Resources - DiversityWeb
John Hawkins, martin frobisher, et. Sir Walter Raleigh, Selections from The Discoveryof new Guiana; AbuLughod, Before European Hegemony The world System AD
http://www.diversityweb.org/diversity_innovations/curriculum_change/diversity_re

67. Canada's Prospecting And Mining Heritage, By The BC & Yukon Chamber Of Mines
Centuries later, much excitement was generated in Europe by reports of gold discoveriesmade by martin frobisher and other explorers to the new world.
http://www.bc-mining-house.com/educ/prospecting/heritage.htm
Prospecting course
Field School

Placer course

Exploration Primer
...
History

Part 1
Canada's First Prospectors
Europeans had better results when they sought the guidance of those who had come before them: First Nations' peoples who, without doubt, were this country's first prospectors and miners. For generations, aboriginals had mined native copper, shaped it into tools and artifacts for their own use, or to trade with tribes that lived away from any available copper. Samuel de Champlain, the first governor of New France, enlisted the aid of natives when he set out to develop mineral occurrences in the early 1600s. Discoveries of iron and silver were soon reported in Nova Scotia, and after these beginnings, a few small mines were operated by French and English settlers. But interest in minerals waned as this country's founders turned their attention towards the wealth being generated from furs.
The Treasure is Buried
For those early explorers, the search for the rocks from which these metals are produced was a constant struggle against geography and nature. Only those driven by an adventurous spirit, by need or by greed, had the fortitude to withstand the harsh climate, the mosquitoes and lonely vastness of a strange, wild land.

68. UShistory1
English Settlements exploration and Settlement led by 15761578 martin Frobisherlooks for a Northwest Passage English settlement in the new world, and claim
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~upchurch/US/UShistory1.html
EUROPEAN POWERS IN THE NEW WORLD - 16TH CENTURY
Main Ambitions - to find a passage to the Orient
- to find gold and other luxury goods
- to claim the new lands before other European powers claimed them EARLY EXPLORATIONS AND SETTLEMENTS New Spain
1493 Columbus founds Hispaniola
1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, divides New World between Spain and Portugal
1513 Juan Ponce De Leon lands in Florida
1531-1538 Francisco Pizarro conquers the Incas
1565 Spain establishes St. Augustine, Florida
1566-1581 The Dutch gain Independence from Spain
1573 The Comprehensive Orders for New Discoveries puts the pacification of the northern lands in the hands of the missionaries rather than military adventurers. 1588 Spanish Armada is defeated by England New France Exploration and settlement led by explorer and traders (coureurs de bois). Main sources of profit are fish and furs. 1524 Giovanni da Verrezano explores the North American coast 1532 Papal Bull allows France to claim new lands discovered in the Americas 1534,1542 Jacques Cartier explores the Canadian coast; claims lands bounded by the Gulf of St. Lawrence; French establish a profitable fur trade 1562,1564 French Huguenots attempt to establish colonies in South Carolina and Florida; one fails to be self-sustaining, Spain destroys the second

69. Arctic Studies Center - Publications - Staff Publications
explores the legacy of martin frobisher's voyages to ultimately a failure, frobisher'svoyages, the European expansionism and new world intercultural contact.
http://www.mnh.si.edu/arctic/html/pub_staff.html
Vikings Looking Both Ways Arctic Wildlife Crossroads/Continents Yup'ik Masks Alutiiq Dance Arctic Social Sciences Repatriation Yamal Ainu
Get Plug-ins

Help Printing

Credits

In addition to publications produced by the Arctic Studies Center, researchers at the Center are involved in numerous independent publication projects. Below is a sample of books written by ASC staff. For more information about individual staff publications, please contact the Arctic Studies Center or the appropriate researcher.
Ethnology of the Ungava District: Hudson Bay Territory
Lucien M. Turner with an Introduction by Stephen Loring.
Washington D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001. One of the foremost natural historians of his time, Lucien M. Turner spent the years between 1882 and 1884 in the Ungava district in the northern Quebec-Labrador peninsula studying the Innu and Inuit. His work, Ethnology of the Ungava District , first published in 1894 as part of the Smithsonian's Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology series, as well as the numerous collections and photographs he took while in the north, stand as invaluable snapshots of the lifeways, language, stories and material culture of the Innu and Inuit. This reissue of his northern ethnology ensures that Turner's work will continue to be a classic introduction to the people of northern Quebec and Labrador.

70. Canadian History
The Nunavut Voyages of martin frobisher Narrative interspersed excerpts of documentsof frobisher's 1576 voyage and images dealing with new Foundland's world
http://www.lib.washington.edu/subject/History/tm/canada.html
Canadian History
General Guides Major Document Collections Major Image Collections
General Guides to Canadian Studies
Major Document Collections

71. Links To Henry Hudson Pages, Plus A Bibliography, Text Format
Moon's arrival in the new world www.lihistory source of information about explorationand adventure Chronicles the voyages of martin frobisher, his relations
http://www.ianchadwick.com/hudson/htlinks.html
Links to other pages on Henry Hudson and Arctic exploration
plus a bibliography of sources
If you have not explored my extensive Henry Hudson pages, click here:
www.ianchadwick.com/hudson/
to begin your journey. Updated February 10, 2001. Half Moon replica
A detailed page about the replica of Hudson's ship. Also check out:
www.newnetherland.org/

the home page of the New Netherland Museum. The museum operates the reproduction of the ship that Henry Hudson sailed from Holland to the New World in 1609. Many good pictures. A model of the Half Moon is available from Hobby World at:
www.hobbyworld-inc.com/woodship47.html

Also see Schooner Man's page on the replica and related sea links
www.novagate.com/~schoonerman/halfmoon.htm

And another site about the Half Moon, with Juet's entire journal of the 1609 voyage is at: www.timesunion.com/halfmoon/
Here's the Hudson River MAritime Museum, with images and information about the Half Moon: www.ulster.net/~hrmm/halfmoon/1609moon.htm Hudson in Dutch service
Hudson's years with the Dutch East India Company. Also see: odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/E/newnetherlands/nlxx.htm

72. Other English Explorers
in Australia were the miserablest People in the world. and new Ireland, islandsnear new Guinea. Sir martin frobisher Sir martin frobisher (FROH bih shuhr
http://www2.worldbook.com/features/explorers/html/newworld_oee.html

Christopher Columbus
Other Italian explorers Spanish explorers Portuguese explorers ...
Sir Walter Raleigh

Other English
explorers
French explorers Other explorers
of the Great Age
Charting the explorers of the Great Age ...
of European Exploration
Other English explorers
Click on the links below to read about other English explorers of the great age of European exploration.
William Baffin

John Cabot

Sebastian Cabot

William Dampier
... Bartholomew Gosnold William Baffin William Baffin (1584?-1622), was an English navigator and explorer. In 1612, he went to Greenland with an expedition. In 1615, he led an expedition to find the Northwest Passage to Asia. His name was given to Baffin Bay, which he explored in 1616, and to Baffin Island. He explored Greenland in 1612 and 1615. In 1616, he became the first European to reach Ellesmere Island. Sir Clements R. Markham edited stories of Baffin's expeditions and published them as The Voyages of William Baffin (1881). Baffin was killed while serving with the East India Company on the island of Qishm in the Persian Gulf. return to top John Cabot John Cabot (1450?-1498?) made the first English voyage to North America. His voyage, in 1497, gave England a claim to the mainland of North America and led to the founding of the English colonies in America.

73. Canada Web Directory: History
The Nunavut voyages of martin frobisher frobisher's expeditions to and the earliestattempt by the English to establish a colony in the new world.
http://dirs.educationcanada.com/cat/28208/

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Culture Folklore@ ... This Day in History Web Sites in Category History Canada and The War of 1812
- Article on the war of 1812 as well as photos of stamps issued to honor Isaac Brock, Laura Secord, Charles de Salaberry and Tecumseh. Canadian Confederation - Tells how Canada came to be, from the original four provinces in 1867 to the present. Historical essays showcase documents, articles and photographs. Canadian Geographical Names. - Interactive and authoritative source of data with over 350,000 official and formerly official geographical names available in both English and French. Canadian Heritage Gallery - Collection of photographs, documents, illustrations, and maps highlighting Canadian history. Canadian History Portal - A guide to materials on Canadian history in digital format. Content is supervised by an expert editorial board. Canadian Labour History: 1850-1999 - The Canadian Museum of Civilization traces the history of Canadian Labour with the aim of showing how it served its members while forcing broader reforms.

74. Renaissance Overview.html
main architect of the reform was martin Luther a exploration that man exploded onthe world scene. By the 1400s new technology, politics, society and economics
http://www.mvrhs.mv.k12.ma.us/netsite/School/departments/social/Renaissance/RenO
Renaissance Overview As the Middle Ages began to crumble a new vision was emerging in Italy, that of the Renaissance. The Renaissance was a "Rebirth" of ancient Greek and Roman learning. It manifested itself in fine art, new learning and economic growth. A new secular attitude arose and it was unique to Italy for the following reasons: 1) Italy was centrally located between Constantinople in the East and the rest of mainland Europe in the West. Due to its location Italy became the "middle man" of the trading world. Because of its dominance in trade Italy was to reap the many benefits associated with this position. 2) Trade brought an immense amount of wealth to Italy, this brought about a rise in a wealthy middle class. This influx of wealth enabled people to then invest in areas they would not have previously. Rich merchants began to invest in art, a new secular art devoid of religious themes. Education increased with the endowments of great universities. Money was spent on new enterprises allowing for many new inventions. Banking began to increase in order to accomodate these finacial dealings. Money was leant to explorers, merchants and even Kings. The growth in investment in turn lead to greater wealth. 3) While Northern Europe was encased in a monarchical, and in some cases centrallized, form of government, Italy was not. Italy maintained a city-state system which allowed for a larger amount of freedom then those experienced by other nations. In addition most leaders within the city-state system were in fact members of the new wealthy class. Cities such as Florence, Milan and Venice each possessing a seperate identity, began to lead the way in this new growth.

75. Humanist Archives Vol. 9 : 9.502 Conferences
Donald D. Hogarth martin frobisher's Northwest Voyages, 1576, 1577, 1578 Institution), Archaeology of the frobisher Voyages The new world Order and
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v09/0477.html
9.502 conferences
Humanist ( mccarty@phoenix.Princeton.EDU
Mon, 29 Jan 1996 18:56:12 -0500 (EST)
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 9, No. 502.
Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities (Princeton/Rutgers)
Information at http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/
[1] From: exempla@nervm.nerdc.ufl.edu (31)
Subject: New College Conference (USF - Sarasota), Complete
Program (X-posted)
Subject: De-Centring Renaissance
Date: Mon, 29 Jan 1996 09:42:07 -0500
From: exempla@nervm.nerdc.ufl.edu
Subject: New College Conference (USF - Sarasota), Complete Program (X-posted) for the 10th Biennial New College of USF Conference on Medieval- Renaissance Studies (Sarasota - March 14-16, 1996) is now available on our WebPage: http://www.clas.ufl.edu/english/exemplaria/ncc.html " (approx. 46K of data). It will remain on-page until March 14 when the Conference

76. Canadian Explorers - EnchantedLearning.com
and administering the French colonies in the new world. led the first voyage aroundthe world). frobisher, martin Sir martin frobisher (1535?1594) was an
http://www.zoomwhales.com/explorers/canada.shtml
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Zoom Explorers A B C D ... Glossary of Exploration Terms Explorers of Canada
More information on Canada AMUNDSEN, ROALD Roald Amundsen (1872-1928) was a Norwegian polar explorer who was the first person to fly over the North Pole in a dirigible (May 11-13, 1926) and was the first person to reach the South Pole. Amundsen and his small expedition reached the South Pole on December 14, 1911, traveling by dog sled. Amundsen was also the first person to sail around the world through the Northeast and Northwest passages, from the Atlantic to the Pacific (in 1905). He was the first person to reach both the North and South Poles. Amundsen died in a plane crash attempting to rescue his friend, the Italian explorer Umberto Nobile who was lost in an airship. For more information on Amundsen, click here

77. Johnston Heights Library: Biography Links
What's new. A tribute to Canada Diefenbaker Web Prime Ministers of Canada Earle BirneyHome Page Canadians in the world Canadian Celebrities martin frobisher.
http://www.sd36.bc.ca/Johlib/biography.htm
Home About the Library Educational Links Online Resources ... Text Referencing
:. Biography Links .: General Biography Artists Athletes Canadians Explorers Inventors Leaders/Politicians Mathematicians Musicians Scientists Women - Biography Writers Miscellaneous - Biography
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78. Martin Frobisher: Newfoundland And Labrador Heritage
martin frobisherExplorationNewfoundland and Labrador Heritage Web martin frobisher. (15351594). Posthumous portrait, ca.
http://www.heritage.nf.ca/exploration/frobisher.html
Martin Frobisher
Posthumous portrait, ca. 1620. Courtesy of the National Archives of Canada, C-011413.

79. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
exploration. Sir martin frobisher. On 7th June 1576 he sailed to the NewWorld, leading a mission to try to locate the North West Passage.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C006522/exploration/frobisher.php
Welcome to the ThinkQuest Internet Challenge of Entries
The web site you have requested, The Rebirth of Europe: Renaissance , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to The Rebirth of Europe: Renaissance click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
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Click image for the Site Site Desciption The Renaissance was a dynamic and vicissitual era of change and development. During this time great minds and ideas arose, and from this time we have a rich heritage and history. This website investigates the people, their achievements and the developments they initiated that have helped shape our world into what it is today.
Students Joanne The Wykeham Collegiate
South Africa Amanda Glenbrook South High School
IL, United States

80. Civilization.ca - Voyages Of Martin Frobisher - Legacies Of The Voyages
to the cartography of that part of the world. that of the English had taken a newturning, although martin frobisher's Gold Mine (video) http//www.nfb.ca/FMT/E
http://www.civilization.ca/hist/frobisher/frleg01e.html
QUICK LINKS Home page Archaeology Arts and Crafts Civilizations Cultures First Peoples History Treasures Military history Artifact catalogue Library catalogue Other Web sites Boutique
robisher's Arctic expeditions have long been accounted an historical dead-end. Yet there were a number of respects in which they were significant for the future of North America, Britain, and Nunavut. They mark a beginning for the English preoccupation with finding a northwest passage, which led to the discovery and exploitation of the Hudson Bay area. Even as Frobisher's mission was being diverted from exploration into mining, Francis Drake was being allowed to see if he could find the Pacific end of such a passage. The passage proved an elusive goal for centuries From the perspective of the history of exploration, the 1576 voyage During the 1576 visit of the Gabriel to Frobisher Bay, the ship's boat prepares to carry five sailors ashore.
Watercolour by Gordon Miller
By contrast, the 1578 voyage was part of a larger industrial enterprise, which also produced the most extensive smelting works built in England up to that time. It was a very challenging undertaking to organize, outfit, and hold together the

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