Anthony J. Brown Anthony J. Brown i(A92709 works by) (a.k.a. Anthony Jarrold Brown)
Born: Established: 1927 Chelmsford, Essex,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
;
Gender: Male
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1 1 y separately published work icon Matthew Flinders' Private Journal from 17 December 1803 at Isle de France to 10 July 1814 at London Matthew Flinders , Anthony J. Brown (editor), Gillian Dooley (editor), Adelaide : Friends of the State Library of South Australia , 2005 Z1238457 2005 single work diary
1 y separately published work icon Ill-Starred Captains : Flinders and Baudin Anthony J. Brown , Belair : Crawford House Publishing , 2000 18510587 2000 single work biography

'Ill-Starred Captains describes the French and British voyages of discovery to Australia between 1801 and 1803, led by Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders. The voyages took place amid the global war between France and Britain, which lasted (with two short breaks) from 1792 to 1815. The narrative derives in large part from contemporary sources - the journals, reports, letters and books of participants, including the two captains, their officers and scientific staff. It interweaves the stories of the expeditions as they explore and survey the Australian coast.

'The expeditions met twice - at Encounter Bay, near Adelaide, in April 1802, and again at Port Jackson later the same year. (The first of these meetings will be commemorated nationally as Encounter 2002.) The book discloses fresh information about relations between French and British in the colony during Baudin’s five-month stay.

'Flinders and Baudin, between them, filled in most of the gaps remaining on the map of New Holland - especially the unknown south coast stretching from the Great Australian Bight to the present South Australia-Victoria border. Baudin surveyed many of the little-known areas of the west coast, and also charted the south-east of Van Diemen’s Land. Here his scientists made invaluable observations of the life and customs of the Tasmanian Aborigines. Flinders, for his part, followed Cook’s path up the east coast, then charted Torres Strait and the Gulf of Carpentaria, before returning to Sydney and completing the first circumnavigation of the continent.

'Caught up in an increasingly bitter war, the French and British governments gave little recognition to the geographic and scientific achievements of the expeditions. Both voyages ended in personal disaster for their commanders. Detested by most of his staff, and terminally ill with TB, Baudin died in disgrace on Mauritius (then a French colony) in September 1803. The history of his voyage was written by his enemies on board, who portrayed him as malicious and incompetent.

'Flinders too met his nemesis in Mauritius. After a shipwreck in the Coral Sea, he sailed for England in a small schooner, but was forced to call into the French colony for repairs. Detained at first as a spy, he antagonised the governor, General Decaen, and was held on the island for six years. He returned home in poor health in 1810, and worked on his charts and the history of his Voyage to Terra Australis. It was published on the day before his death, in July 1814. Through their words, the author gives the present-day reader some understanding of what life was like for the men of Flinders and Baudin, crammed together in their leaking, overcrowded ships, and reveals the relationships and tensions on board, the individual hopes and fears, and the rivalries between the expeditions. He seeks to remain impartial and leave readers space to draw their own conclusions.

'Ill-Starred Captains is published in association with the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

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