The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram :An Elizabethan Sailor in Native North America
The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram :An Elizabethan Sailor in Native North America
hardback
Published:
5 May, 2023
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9780197648001 |
| ISBN10 | 0197648002 |
| Number Of Pages | 336 |
| Item Weight | 603 g |
| Product Dimensions | 165 x 239 x 31 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Oxford University Press Inc |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
A highly informative and smooth combination of biography and colonialism history, Snow's book both shines new light on a four-century-old discussion over Ingram's credibility and provides a much-needed new perspective to studying the Age of Discovery. * World History Encyclopedia *
The Elizabethan traveler David Ingram claimed to have walked from the Gulf of Mexico to coastal Canada, a journey that many over time have questioned. Here the renowned archaeologist Dean Snow, through an act of masterful archival sleuthing, has put his journey, which encompassed participation in the slave trade and early ethnographic observations, into a rich and memorable context. * Peter C. Mancall, author of The Trials of Thomas Morton *
In this deftly argued and elegantly written investigation into the travels and travails of David Ingram, Dean Snow argues that we can still learn a few things from the misunderstood shipwreck survivor, despite his mendacity—and more than a few things from Professor Snow himself. * Matthew Restall, author of Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest *
With expert historical detective work, Dean Snow has recovered a compelling 'truth is stranger than fiction' story from early America. David Ingram's odyssey calls to mind the travels of Cabeza de Vaca and Sir Walter Raleigh and the other-worldly fantasy of The Tempest. It is an illuminating record of Elizabethan England's first tentative steps into the New World. * Timothy J. Shannon, author of Indian Captive, Indian King *
Cogent and well-documented, this is a valuable correction to the historical record. * Publishers Weekly *
Provides a rare glimpse of an Atlantic world on the cusp of profound transformations wrought, in part, by ordinary sailors like [Ingram]. * Times Literary Supplement *
Utilising his expertise in the anthropology and archaeology of North America, Snow has meticulously reconstructed Ingram's 3,600-mile journey along known 16th-century indigenous trails, and has also proved that everything Ingram said to his interrogators was true to the best of his knowledge and ability... Fascinating. * History Today *
Utilising his expertise in the anthropology and archaeology of North America, Snow has meticulously reconstructed Ingram's 3,600-mile journey along known 16th-century indigenous trails, and has also proved that everything Ingram said to his interrogators was true to the best of his knowledge and ability... Fascinating. * History Today *
Absorbing... Thanks to Dean Snow's impressive sleuthing, David Ingram's account can at last resume its proper place as an astonishing and true story. * , Sea History *
Snow has done good service to Ingram and to the wider understanding of the world of early Elizabethan mariners. At the very least, this book will provoke scholars to look with fresh eyes on the extraordinary journey of David Ingram. * Cheryl Butler, International Journal of Maritime *
There is plenty here for specialist and general reader alike. Snow has not only rigorously interrogated the manuscript evidence for Ingram's voyage but has provided an indepth analysis of a small, relatively overlooked, but clearly important part of Hakluyt's Voyages. The volume not only serves as an accessible introduction to the period for the general reader but is a testament to the dividends whichcan be yielded using both textual and nontextualevidence. It is an essential reminder not to dismiss the voices of ordinary people in the historical record, even if they had extraordinary stories to tell. * Jack Abernethy, The Mariner's Mirror *
Author's Bio
Dean Snow received his BA from the University of Minnesota and his PhD from the University of Oregon. He taught at the University of Maine and the University at Albany before assuming the headship of the Department of Anthropology at Penn State in 1995. He is an anthropological archaeologist and an ethnohistorian who has conducted field research in Mexico, the US, France, and Spain. He has served as president of the Society for American Archaeology and the American Society for Ethnohistory, as well as serving as an officer in the American Association for the Advancement of Science and three regional associations.