Matthew Flinders
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 210 years ago |
Date of birth | March 16,1774 |
Zodiac sign | Pisces |
Born | Donington |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | July 19,1814 |
Died | London |
United Kingdom | |
Buried | St. James Hampstead Road |
Spouse | Ann Chappelle |
Siblings | Samuel Ward Flinders |
Henrietta Flinders | |
Samuel Flinders | |
John Flinders | |
Children | Anne Petrie |
Parents | Susannah Flinders |
Matthew Flinders | |
Place of burial | St. James Hampstead Road |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 403505 |
Australia Circumnavigated: The Voyage of Matthew Flinders in HMS Investigator, 1801-1803
Observations on the Coasts of Van Diemen's Land, on Bass's Strait and Its Islands, and on Part of the Coasts of New South Wales: Intended to Accompany the Charts of the Late Discoveries in Those Countries
Observations Upon the Marine Barometer Made During the Examination of the Coasts of New Holland and New South Wales in the Years 1801, 1802 and 1803
Matthew Flinders: Personal Letters from an Extraordinary Life
Matthew Flinders Private Journal from 17 December 1803 at Isle de France to 10 July 1814 at London
Die erste Umsegelung Australiens 1801-1803
My Dear Friend: The Flinders-Pitot Correspondence (1806-1814) at the Carnegie Library, Mauritius
The 'Investigator' in Port Phillip April-May 1802: Edited from A Voyage to Terra Australis.
Trim
A Voyage to Terra Australis
Terra Australis: Matthew Flinders' Great Adventures in the Circumnavigation of Australia
A Voyage to Terra Australis - Volume 2
Matthew Flinders Life story
Captain Matthew Flinders was a British navigator and cartographer who led the first inshore circumnavigation of mainland Australia, then called New Holland.
General election 2019: Six ways to improve TV debates
... Or could broadcasters rip up the debate formula altogether and task politicians with convincing a real voter, while the cameras roll? Matthew Flinders, professor of politics at the University of Sheffield would like to see not a debate but a conversation with someone picked out from the public, who would sit down and get to know the politician, understand about their life, where they re coming from and how that flows into their their policies and beliefs...
Bungaree: Indigenous man who helped Flinders explore Australia
...Bungaree was a popular figure in early Sydney, but is now largely forgotten advised There was a lot of excitement when the remains of captain Matthew Flinders were discovered beneath London s Euston Station this week...
Bungaree: Indigenous man who helped Flinders explore Australia
Bungaree was a well-loved figure in early Sydney , but is now largely forgotten
There was much excitement when The Remains of Captain Matthew Flinders were discovered beneath London's Euston Station This Week .
It was Another Chance to tell The Tale of The Brave English sailor who completed The First circumnavigation of Australia in Hms Investigator in the First Years of the 19Th Century .
Of course, His feat is well-remembered in the country where he made His name. His name is on everything from universities and islands, to streets and an entire Mountain Range .
Less well-remembered is another man who sailed alongside Flinders on The Investigator : Bungaree , The First Australian to circumnavigate The Continent he was born on, without whom the success of The Adventure would have been far from assured.
ExplorerBungaree was born in the area now known as Broken Bay , just north of modern day Sydney , in about 1775.
The Royal Naval Captain and explorer James Cook had landed near Sydney five years earlier and claimed The Eastern portion of The Continent for The British crown.
By the time Bungaree was in His early 20s, huge swathes of the indigenous people who had lived in Australia for tens of thousands of years had been wiped Out .
At some point in the 1790s, Bungaree made the decision to move south to the burgeoning city of Sydney . It was here where he began establishing himself as a central figure in the new Colony - Able to move between His own people and The Newcomers .
In 1798, he joined The Crew of the Reliance, which was undertaking a trip to Norfolk Island , almost 900 miles off the coast of Australia.
The voyage clearly left an impression on the young man, as it was The First of many he was to undertake. It was also The Place he would meet - and impress - Capt Flinders.
Captain Matthew Flinders is credited with naming AustraliaIt was Capt Flinders who recruited Bungaree for The Investigator 's trip around The Continent in May 1802. Flinders later wrote it was the Aboriginal man's "good disposition and open and manly conduct" which impressed him.
Bungaree 's kindness to The Ship 's cat Trim would also warrant a mention in The Sailor 's memoirs.
However, it was More Than His disposition that made him invaluable to His crewmates during the 13-month expedition.
Bungaree was the only person born in Australia on The Ship - even Trim had been born at sea - and as such, played a vital diplomatic role as they made their way around the coast, overcoming not inconsiderable language barriers in Places .
Last year. "He often, by Taking Off His clothes and speaking to people in the very Top End of Australia, could mollify the indigenous people who were about to attack The Sailors . "
Read moreBut it was not A Journey without danger for Bungaree himself, as.
"It was very brave of Bungaree , because he was in Uncharted Territory as well. "
'Kindness of heart'The Investigator arrived back in Port Jackson in June 1803, having completed its circumnavigation of Australia but having failed to fully survey the entire coastline.
Back on Land - where His height and penchant for wearing old military uniforms ensured he stood Out - His knowledge and wit made him a popular figure with the colonisers.
Indeed, he was so popular that in 1815 New South Wales Governor Lachlan Macquarie presented him with a brass breastplate as a reward for His loyalty, along with a large piece of Land at George's Head, Port Jackson .
He became known as King Bungaree , and His principal wife, Cora Gooseberry , became Queen .
Sydney and Port Jackson , drawn in the early 1800sTwo years later, he was back on board a Ship , The Mermaid , helping Philip Parker King finish the survey he and Capt Flinders had attempted to complete 15 years earlier.
Just like before, His knowledge proved invaluable.
"There are some wonderful anecdotes in Parker King's journals of going ashore and asking Bungaree 'can we eat this plant'? And.
"In some cases, there's a potential that he might have saved people's lives by telling them what not to eat or what to eat.
"So to me he was More Than just someone who was taken on board to show them around. He was actually, I think, a very strong confidante for Flinders. "
Bungaree did not forget His people, however.
According to Sydney Barani, while, he "was also influential within His own Aboriginal community taking part in corroborees and ritual battles", looking after His community by "selling or bartering Fish ".
Prince William unveiled a statue of Capt Flinders and Trim at Australia House , in London, back in 2014As Russian Captain Thaddeus Bellingshausen wrote, Bungaree "has always been noted for His kindness of heart, gentleness and other excellent qualities and has been of great service to The Colony ", but also "often endangered His life in His efforts to keep The Peace within His tribe".
Despite the accolades from The Europeans , the racist undertones were never Far Away .
"The facetiousness of the sable chief, and the superiority of His mental endowments, over those of the generality of His race, obtained for him a More Than ordinary share of regard from the white inhabitants of The Colony ," the Sydney Gazette wrote in an article announcing His death in 1830.
Today, His legacy appears almost all but forgotten. There are statues to Flinders and even The Cat Trim, but as yet, there are no statues to Bungaree recognising His role in the exploration of Australia.
"It breaks my heart that we, as Australians, don't have a statue to Bungaree that celebrates an iconic figure and someone who actually assisted in building this continent and building our nation's history," Mr Janke said.
No Doubt , with The Discovery of Capt Flinders' grave and the renewed interest in The Investigator , there are hopes this will soon change.
australia, sydney, indigenous australians, australian aboriginal culture
Source of news: bbc.com