Captain Cook: History’s Intrepid Explorer

Nacido en una familia humilde, este audaz navegante y explorador lideró tres legendarios viajes oceánicos que cambiaron los mapas del mundo y el conocimiento que Europa Occidental tenía de la mitad del planeta Tierra y de los pueblos que la habitaban.

Bandera UK
Daniel Francis

Speaker (UK accent)

Actualizado a

471 James Cook Pol Serra

Escucha este articulo

Imprimir

James Cook was an 18th-century British explorer, cartographer and navigator who mapped the Pacific, New Zealand and Australia on three famous voyages between 1768 and 1779, radically changing western perceptions of world geography. He determined the boundaries of the habitable world and opened up new lands to European trade and colonisation.

Cook was born on 27 October 1728, in a small village in Yorkshire. His father was a farm worker. Cook joined the merchant navy as a teenager and then the Royal Navy in 1755. He served in North America in the Seven Years’ War, where he learnt to survey and chart coastal waters with great precision.       

terra incognita

Cook’s mapping fame reached the Admiralty, the government department that administered the Royal Navy, and The Royal Society, Britain’s national academy of sciences, at exactly the moment when British overseas exploration and empire-building were really beginning. In 1768, the Government decided to send an expedition under Cook to the Southern Hemisphere to observe Venus passing in front of the Sun. This would help determine the distance of the Earth from the Sun. Cook, commanding claim HMSEndeavour, also had secret plans to search the south Pacific for the postulated southern continent of Terra Australis Incognita — and it for Britain. 

The Passage of Venus was recorded perfectly in 1769, but no continent was found. However, Cook was able to map the complete coastline of New Zealand, a marvel of cartography. He was the first European to communicate with the Māori — but eight Māoris were killed in violent encounters. He then became the first European to reach the eastern coastline of Australia in 1770, which he claimed for Britain, naming it New South Wales. Dramatic scientific discoveries were made on the voyage, including thousands of new species. Cook’s revelations of other cultures and civilisations inspired awe in Europe.  

final voyage

Cook set out from England again in 1772 to look for the fabled southern continent once more. His two ships sailed close to the Antarctic, but were forced to turn back by the cold. He then visited New Zealand and Tahiti, making charts that would remain in use until the 1950s. He returned to England in 1775 and was finally made captain. 

Cook’s final voyage, in 1776, was to find the postulated North-West Passage near the Arctic, believed to link the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. He was frustrated again, but he charted most of the North American coastline for the first time. He then took his two ships south to explore the island of Hawaii. However, Cook now suffered violent moods. He punished his crew, tortured natives and even reportedly burnt down villages. After the theft of a longboat from HMS Resolution on 14 February 1779, Cook tried to take the Hawaiian chief hostage. Thousands of Hawaiians retaliated. They surrounded Cook and his men, and a skirmish ensued during which Cook was stabbed and clubbed repeatedly, dying from his wounds. While accounts of the captain’s death and its aftermath remain contentious, according to a recent historical study, the Hawaiians then prepared Cook’s body with funerary rituals usually reserved for a vanquished chief, with his body dismembered and his bones divided among the natives, possibly as religious icons.   

Controversial Figure

In Cook’s three voyages, he sailed thousands of miles across largely uncharted areas of the globe, mapping lands in greater detail than any other Western explorer — although often with the help of local islanders. He left a legacy of scientific and geographical knowledge that profoundly influenced his successors into the 20th century. Yet while his seamanship, courage and leadership were never in doubt, his sometimes violent contact with indigenous peoples remains a source of huge controversy today.  

00 PORTADA 466 Bridgerton

Este artículo pertenece al número de june 2024 de la revista Speak Up.

Anglopolis: Weather Talk
iStock

Language

Anglopolis: Weather Talk

La situación geográfica de Gran Bretaña define su característico clima húmedo. También tiene una explicación científica la costumbre de hablar del tiempo, sin duda una de las aficiones favoritas de los británicos.

Sarah Presant Collins

More in Explore

5 consejos para no olvidar el inglés que aprendemos
iStock

Tips and resources

5 consejos para no olvidar el inglés que aprendemos

Para que la información se nos quede grabada de forma permanente, tenemos que repasarla constantemente. Aquí te doy algunos consejos sobre cómo incorporar ese repaso a tu día a día.

Natalie Gommon

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Julian Barnes: Truth and Delusion
Free image

Classic Books

Julian Barnes: Truth and Delusion

En su obra, que incluye títulos como El loro de Flaubert, la novela ganadora del premio Booker El sentido de un final, o la más reciente La única historia, el autor inglés trata temas como la historia, la identidad y la memoria. Barnes es además una de las grandes figuras literarias que se lamentan del absurdo de la salida del Reino Unido de la UE.

Alex Phillips