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Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English Nation 20 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English Nation. You can also browse the collection for Sarmiento (Argentina) or search for Sarmiento (Argentina) in all documents.

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ntrey was so full of snow, and withall there arose such a sudden storme, that he could not set Sarmiento and his men on shore, but was constrained the second time to returne unto the river of Jenero as the water did ebbe they tooke all things out of her. This being done, Diego de Ribera left Sarmiento with foure hundreth men, thirtie women, and a ship, with victuals for eight moneths : and witha the wind came off the sea with such violence, that it forced the ship to run on shore; where Sarmiento had three of his men drowned, and he with the rest hardly escaped: and so this ship was lost wnour of Baya seeing that the king wrote not unto him, would give him no more succour : so that Sarmiento was constrained to make a voyage for Spaine in the same shippe, wherein hee last sayled towards : and it is sayd that hee was taken in the way by Englishmen, and caried into England . This Sarmiento hath caried the name to be the best Navigator in all Spaine, and that hee hath sayled the fu
Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English Nation, A discourse of the West Indies and South sea written by Lopez Vaz a Portugal , borne in the citie of Elvas , continued unto the yere 1587. Wherein among divers rare things not hitherto delivered by any other writer, certaine voyages of our Englishmen are truely reported: which was intercepted with the author thereof at the river of Plate, by Captaine Withrington and Captaine Christopher Lister, in the fleete set foorth by the right Honorable the Erle of Cumberland for the South sea in the yeere 1586. (search)
ntrey was so full of snow, and withall there arose such a sudden storme, that he could not set Sarmiento and his men on shore, but was constrained the second time to returne unto the river of Jenero as the water did ebbe they tooke all things out of her. This being done, Diego de Ribera left Sarmiento with foure hundreth men, thirtie women, and a ship, with victuals for eight moneths : and witha the wind came off the sea with such violence, that it forced the ship to run on shore; where Sarmiento had three of his men drowned, and he with the rest hardly escaped: and so this ship was lost wnour of Baya seeing that the king wrote not unto him, would give him no more succour : so that Sarmiento was constrained to make a voyage for Spaine in the same shippe, wherein hee last sayled towards : and it is sayd that hee was taken in the way by Englishmen, and caried into England . This Sarmiento hath caried the name to be the best Navigator in all Spaine, and that hee hath sayled the fu