The Russians and Australia

Volume 1 of Russia and the South Pacific, 1696-1840

By Glynn Barratt
Publisher: UBC Press
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774843164, 347 pages, November 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774856836, 347 pages, January 1988

Table of contents

Illustrations

Preface and Acknowledgments

Preliminary Notes

Russian Vessels in Australia, 1807-35

1. Beginnings, 1696-1796

2. Translating Projects into Action, 1783-1803

3. The First Russian Visits to Port Jackson

4. The 1820 Visits: Bellingshausen and Vasil'ev

5. New Scientific Emphases: The Visitors of 1822

6. Aboriginals, Tasmanians, and Runaways

7. The Russian Visitors of 1825-35

Appendix A: Earlier Russian Science in Australia: Some
Contributions

Appendix B: Notes on Soviet and Other Archival Sources

Appendix C: Bellingshausen's List of Plant Specimens Notes
Bibliography Name Index Ship Index

Description

Known for his pioneering work on Russia's early exploits in
Australia and the Pacific, historian Glynn Barratt again breaks new
ground in presenting the first comprehensive study of Russian naval,
social, mercantile, and scientific enterprise in New South Wales
between 1807 and 1835.

Reviews

The interest and extent of the materials that Barratt brings together and renders accessible to a non-Russian readership is impressive. The Russians, it is clear, were significant players on the Pacific stage. Until now, they have for the most part been overlooked by Western scholars studying the European penetration of the region. Never again shall we be able to find an excuse for doing so. Barratt has made sure of that!

- R.W. Home

A detailed survey, meticulously and indeed almost overwhelmingly documented; the appendix on archival sources and the thirty-page bibliography would undoubtedly be a valuable guide to those scholars who are interested in what is after all a relatively minor phase of Russian and Pacific history ... A storehouse of information, which one may hope will contribute to redressing a marked imbalance in Australia's view of the Pacific.

- O. H. K. Spate

Based on extensive research in the journals and collections left by the Russian seamen, this excellent study brings out the detailed and valuable account of not only the flora and fauna of Australia, but also of the British penal system and other aspects of life in Australia.

- S. K. Gupta, Pittsburgh State University