At Home with the Patagonians
Orphaned by the age of four, George Chaworth Musters (1841–79) joined the Royal Navy at thirteen, served with distinction during the Crimean War, and reached the rank of commander. Having been stationed on the coast of South America, during which time he read up on Darwin's voyage in the Beagle, he pursued in 1869 his aim of travelling through the south of the continent. In this 1871 publication, which earned him the nickname 'the king of Patagonia', Musters records the year he spent among native Patagonians, covering almost 1,400 miles. He gives a detailed account of their customs and daily life, particularly the manners, dress, hunting practices and methods of battle of the Tehuelche people. Featuring a number of vivid engravings, the book did much to reveal this land to Europeans. It remains an instructive text in the history of South American exploration and anthropology.
Product details
October 2013Paperback
9781108066792
368 pages
216 × 140 × 21 mm
0.47kg
8 b/w illus. 2 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. From the straits to Santa Cruz
- 2. Santa Cruz
- 3. The Rio Chico
- 4. Hennokaik to Teckel
- 5. Manners and customs of the Tehuelches
- 6. Teckel to Geylum
- 7. Las Manzanas
- 8. Geylum to Patagones
- 9. The Rio Negro settlements
- Appendices.