The principal nauigations, voyages, traffiques and discoueries of the English nation. [vols. 1-3] made by sea or ouer-land, to the remote and farthest distant quarters of the earth, at any time within the compasse of these 1600. yeres: deuided into three seuerall volumes, according to the positions of the regions, whereunto they were directed. The first volume containeth the worthy discoueries, &c. of the English ... The second volume comprehendeth the principall nauigations ... to the south and south-east parts of the world ... By Richard Hakluyt preacher, and sometime student of Christ-Church in Oxford.

About this Item

Title
The principal nauigations, voyages, traffiques and discoueries of the English nation. [vols. 1-3] made by sea or ouer-land, to the remote and farthest distant quarters of the earth, at any time within the compasse of these 1600. yeres: deuided into three seuerall volumes, according to the positions of the regions, whereunto they were directed. The first volume containeth the worthy discoueries, &c. of the English ... The second volume comprehendeth the principall nauigations ... to the south and south-east parts of the world ... By Richard Hakluyt preacher, and sometime student of Christ-Church in Oxford.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: By George Bishop, Ralph Newberie, and Robert Barker,
Anno 1599[-1600]
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
Voyages and travels -- Early works to 1800.
Discoveries (in geography), English -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A02495.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The principal nauigations, voyages, traffiques and discoueries of the English nation. [vols. 1-3] made by sea or ouer-land, to the remote and farthest distant quarters of the earth, at any time within the compasse of these 1600. yeres: deuided into three seuerall volumes, according to the positions of the regions, whereunto they were directed. The first volume containeth the worthy discoueries, &c. of the English ... The second volume comprehendeth the principall nauigations ... to the south and south-east parts of the world ... By Richard Hakluyt preacher, and sometime student of Christ-Church in Oxford." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A02495.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 21, 2025.

Pages

De quodam idolo mirabili, & de quibusdam ritibus eorum.

IN hoc regno est vnum Idolum mirabile, quod omnes Indi reuerentur: & est statura hominis ita magni, sicut noster Christophorus depictus, & est totum de auro purissimo & splendidissi∣mo, & circa collum habet vnam chordulam sericam cum lapidibus pretiosissimis, quorū aliquis valet plus quàm vnum regnum: Domus idoli est tota de auro, scilicet in recto, & pauimento, & superficie parietum interius & exterius. Ad illud idolum peregrinantur Indi, sicut nos ad S. Pe∣trum: Alij veniunt cum chorda ad collum, alij cum manibus retrò ligatis, alij cum cultello in brachio vel tibia defixo, & si post peregrinationè fiat brachium marcidum, illum reputant san∣ctum, & benè cum Deo suo. Iuxta ecclesiam illius idoli est lacus vnus manufactus, & manife∣stus, in quem peregrini proijciunt aurum & argentum, & lapides pretiosos in honorem Idoli, & ad aedificationem ecclesiae suae, & ideò quando aliquid debet ornari, vel reparari, vadunt homi∣nes

Page 45

ad hunc lacum, & proiecta extrahunt: die aurem annua constructionis illius idoli, ex & regina cum toto populo & omnibus peregrinis accedunt, & ponunt illud idolum in vno curru pretiosissimo ipsum de ecclesia educentes cum Canticis, & omni genere musicorum, & multae virgines antecedunt ipsum binae & binae, processionaliter combinatae modulantes: Peregrini etiam multi ponunt se sub curru, vt transeat Deus supra eos; & omnes super quos currus trans∣it,* 1.1 comminuit, & per medium scindit, & interficit, & per hoc reputant se mori pro deo suo sanctè & securè: & in omni anno hoc modo moriuntur in via sub idolo plusquam 500 homi∣nes, quorum corpora comburuntur, & cineres sicut reliquiae custodiuntur, quia sic pro Deo suo moriuntur. Alium ritum habent, quando aliquis homo offert se mori pro deo suo, conue∣niunt omnes amici eius & parentes cum histrionibus multis, facientes sibi festum magnum, & post festum appendunt collo eius 5 cultellos acutissimos ducentes cum ante idolum, quò cum peruenerit, sumit vnum ex cultellis, & clamat alta voce, pro deo meo incido mihi de carne mea, & frustum incisum proijcit in faciem idoli: vltima verò incisione per quam seipsum interficit, dicit, me mori pro deo meo permitto, quo mortuo corpus eius comburitur, & sanctum fore ab omnibus creditur. Rex illius regionis est ditissimus in auro & argento, & gemmis pretiosis; ibi etiam sunt margaritae pulchriores de mundo. Indè transiens iui per mare occanum versus me∣ridiem per 50 dietas ad unam terram vocatam Lammori, in qua ex immensitate caloris, tam vi∣ri quam foeminae omnes incedunt nudi in toto corpore: Qui videntes me vestitum, deridebant me, dicentes Deum, Adam & Euam fecisse nudos. In illa regionè omnes mulieres sunt commu∣nes, ita quòd nullus potest dicere, haec est vxor mea, & cùm mulier aliqua parit filium vel filiam dat cui vult de hijs qui concubuerunt: Tota etiam terra illius regionis habetur in communi,* 1.2 ita quòd non meum & tuum in diuisione terrarū, domos tamen habent speciales: Carnes humane quando homo est pinguis ita benè comeduntur, sicut inter nos bouinae: & licet gens sit pesti∣fera, tamen terra optima est, & abundat in omnibus bonis, carnibus, bladis, riso, auro, argento, & liguis Aloe, cansari, & multis alijs. Mercatores autem cum accedunt ad hanc regionem ducunt secum homines pingues vendentes illos genti illius regionis, sicut nos vendimus porcos, qui statim occidunt cos & comedunt. In hac insula versus meridiem est aliud regnum vocatū Sy∣molcra,* 1.3 in quo tam viri quam mulieres signant se ferro calido in facie, in 12. partibus, Et hij sem∣per bellant cum hominibus nudis in alia regione. Vltra transiui ad aliam insulam quae vocatur Iaua cuius ambitus per mare est trium milliū milliarium,* 1.4 & rex illius insulae habet sub se 7. reges coronatos, & haec insula optimè inhabitatur, & melior secunda de mundo reputatur. In ea na∣scūtur in copia garyophylli, cubibez, & nuces muscate: & breuiter omnes species ibi sunt, & ma¦xima abundantia amniū victualium praeterquam vini. Rex illius terrae habet palatium nobilissi∣mū inter omnia quae vidi altissimè stat, & gradus & scalas habet altissimos, quorum semper v∣nus gradus est aureus, alius argenteus; Pauimentum verò vnum laterem habet de auro, aliū de argēto. Parietes verò omnes interius sunt laminati laminis aureis, in quibus sculpti sunt Equites de auro habentes circa caput circulum aureum plenum lapidibus pretiosis: Tectum est de au∣ro puro. Cum isto rege ille magnus Canis de Katay frequenter fuit in bello: Quem tamen semper ille Rex vicit & superaut.

Notes

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.