This article critically examines the assumption that the men of Sir John Franklin's last Arctic expedition died because, influenced by the characteristic British cultural prejudices of their time, they refused to employ Inuit survival skills. Since no detailed records from this expedition have ever been found, there is no direct evidence about the attitudes held or actions taken by its members. The article therefore draws on another source: the very extensive British periodical and newspaper coverage of the Franklin search. The writers who contributed to this literature knew even less than is now known about the events of the last Franklin expedition, but their speculations about the probable fate of the lost explorers reflect the beliefs a...
The 1819-1822 overland Arctic expedition led by John Franklin was one of the most disastrous in pola...
International audienceThis reflection deals with the role Inuit knowledges and oral history played i...
Much historical scholarship has examined the events which took place as various explorers ventured i...
Of all the polar heroes of the 19th century, Sir John Franklin might be regarded as the most tragic ...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
By the 1850s, journalists and readers alike perceived Britain's search for the Northwest Passage as ...
This article compares the representations of aboriginal people, and especially the Yellowknife leade...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of dis...
The expedition to the Arctic led by Sir John Franklin in 1819-22 was a major event in Britain’s resu...
This article examines the relationship between Lady Lucy Barry and John Franklin. Barry has been dis...
On 13th November 1905, the Danish sea captain Ejnar Mikkelsen presented his detailed plans to survey...
ABSTRACT. An archaeological survey to aid in the determination of the exact route of the last Sir Jo...
The central issue in Sir John Franklin's Journals and Correspondence: The First Arctic Land Expediti...
In the spring of 1848 the first expeditions sailed in search of the lost Franklin expedition. Unfort...
ABSTRACT. Nineteenth-century exploration of the Canadian Arctic, primarily directed by the British ...
The 1819-1822 overland Arctic expedition led by John Franklin was one of the most disastrous in pola...
International audienceThis reflection deals with the role Inuit knowledges and oral history played i...
Much historical scholarship has examined the events which took place as various explorers ventured i...
Of all the polar heroes of the 19th century, Sir John Franklin might be regarded as the most tragic ...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
By the 1850s, journalists and readers alike perceived Britain's search for the Northwest Passage as ...
This article compares the representations of aboriginal people, and especially the Yellowknife leade...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of dis...
The expedition to the Arctic led by Sir John Franklin in 1819-22 was a major event in Britain’s resu...
This article examines the relationship between Lady Lucy Barry and John Franklin. Barry has been dis...
On 13th November 1905, the Danish sea captain Ejnar Mikkelsen presented his detailed plans to survey...
ABSTRACT. An archaeological survey to aid in the determination of the exact route of the last Sir Jo...
The central issue in Sir John Franklin's Journals and Correspondence: The First Arctic Land Expediti...
In the spring of 1848 the first expeditions sailed in search of the lost Franklin expedition. Unfort...
ABSTRACT. Nineteenth-century exploration of the Canadian Arctic, primarily directed by the British ...
The 1819-1822 overland Arctic expedition led by John Franklin was one of the most disastrous in pola...
International audienceThis reflection deals with the role Inuit knowledges and oral history played i...
Much historical scholarship has examined the events which took place as various explorers ventured i...