This paper reports on the life of the English Country trader Captain Frazer Sinclair leading up to and following the loss of the Forbes in the Karimata Strait in 1806. It examines the adventure and tenuous times of trading around the Indonesian archipelago after the fall of the VOC and subsequent transfer to the British. Included are the details of Captain Sinclair's trading history, multiple prizes as a privateer, and shipwrecks
The Earl of Abergevnny was an East Indiaman which was wrecked in 1805 off the Isle of Portland, Engl...
The sea has brought me tribute from many lands. Chests of silver, barrels of tobacco, sugar-loaves. ...
This is the fifth in a series of research papers and articles examining the activities of Australian...
The fate of two vessels that left Fort Dundas within a week of each other in February of 1825 and we...
Batavia, a Dutch East Indiaman, sank in 1629 on its maiden voyage to the Indies in the Houtman Abro...
General Introduction The reefs surrounding the Houtman Abrolhos in Western Australia were a not...
The Dutch East Indiaman 'Zeewijk', which foundered in 1727, is the youngest of five East Indiamen kn...
The fair vessel Batavia set sail from the port of Amsterdam on her maiden voyage on 28 October 1628,...
Two Portuguese naus from Vasco da Gama's second voyage to India, left behind to disrupt maritime tra...
Remarkable Voyages and ShipwrecksLoss of the Nottingham Galley, on the coast of North America -- Los...
This journal has been published at different time periods under the following titles: Explorations: ...
In 1763 a large ship, the Amstelveen, part of the fleet of the Dutch East-India Company (VOC), saile...
This paper examines naval heritage in Indonesian waters, focusing on HMAS Perth (I) and other Allied...
The existence of an unidentified 18th century Dutch shipwreck emerges periodically in books, letters...
Page range: 67-96Around 1800, an increasing number of Sea People (Bugis, Malay, Iranun, and others) ...
The Earl of Abergevnny was an East Indiaman which was wrecked in 1805 off the Isle of Portland, Engl...
The sea has brought me tribute from many lands. Chests of silver, barrels of tobacco, sugar-loaves. ...
This is the fifth in a series of research papers and articles examining the activities of Australian...
The fate of two vessels that left Fort Dundas within a week of each other in February of 1825 and we...
Batavia, a Dutch East Indiaman, sank in 1629 on its maiden voyage to the Indies in the Houtman Abro...
General Introduction The reefs surrounding the Houtman Abrolhos in Western Australia were a not...
The Dutch East Indiaman 'Zeewijk', which foundered in 1727, is the youngest of five East Indiamen kn...
The fair vessel Batavia set sail from the port of Amsterdam on her maiden voyage on 28 October 1628,...
Two Portuguese naus from Vasco da Gama's second voyage to India, left behind to disrupt maritime tra...
Remarkable Voyages and ShipwrecksLoss of the Nottingham Galley, on the coast of North America -- Los...
This journal has been published at different time periods under the following titles: Explorations: ...
In 1763 a large ship, the Amstelveen, part of the fleet of the Dutch East-India Company (VOC), saile...
This paper examines naval heritage in Indonesian waters, focusing on HMAS Perth (I) and other Allied...
The existence of an unidentified 18th century Dutch shipwreck emerges periodically in books, letters...
Page range: 67-96Around 1800, an increasing number of Sea People (Bugis, Malay, Iranun, and others) ...
The Earl of Abergevnny was an East Indiaman which was wrecked in 1805 off the Isle of Portland, Engl...
The sea has brought me tribute from many lands. Chests of silver, barrels of tobacco, sugar-loaves. ...
This is the fifth in a series of research papers and articles examining the activities of Australian...