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Alejandro Malaspina

Alejandro Malaspina (November 5, 1754 – April 9, 1810) was a Tuscan explorer who spent most of his life as a Spanish naval officer. Under a Spanish royal commission, he undertook a voyage around the world from 1786 to 1788, then, from 1789 to 1794, a scientific expedition (the Malaspina Expedition) throughout the Pacific Ocean, exploring and mapping much of the west coast of the Americas from Cape Horn to the Gulf of Alaska, crossing to Guam and the Philippines, and stopping in New Zealand, Australia, and Tonga.

Alejandro Malaspina
Birth nameAlessandro Malaspina
Other name(s)Alexandro Malaspina
Born(1754-11-05)November 5, 1754
Mulazzo, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire
DiedApril 9, 1810(1810-04-09) (aged 55)
Pontremoli, French Empire
Allegiance Spain
Service/branch Navy of Spain
Years of service1774–1795
RankBrigadier
Commands heldMalaspina Expedition
Battles/warsGreat Siege of Gibraltar

Malaspina was christened Alessandro, the Italian form of Alexander. He signed his letters in Spanish Alexandro, which is usually modernized to Alejandro by scholars.[1]

Early life edit

Malaspina was born in Mulazzo, a small principality ruled by his family, then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, a fiefdom of the Holy Roman Empire. Alessandro's parents were the Marquis Carlo Morello and Caterina Meli Lupi di Soragna. From 1762 to 1765, his family lived in Palermo with Alessandro's great-uncle, Giovanni Fogliani Sforza d'Aragona, the viceroy of Sicily. From 1765 to 1773 he studied at the Clementine College in Rome. In 1773 he was accepted into the Order of Malta and spent about a year living on the island of Malta where he learned the basics of sailing.

Naval service edit

Malaspina entered the Royal Navy of Spain in 1774 and received the rank of Guardiamarina.[2]

Between 1774 and 1786 he took part in a number of naval battles and received many promotions. In January 1775, aboard the frigate Santa Teresa, Malaspina took part of the expedition to relieve Melilla, which was under siege by Moroccans. Shortly after he was promoted to frigate-ensign (alférez de fragata). In July 1775 he participated the siege of Algiers and in 1776 was promoted to ship's ensign (alférez de navío).[2]

From 1777 to 1779, aboard the frigate Astrea, Malaspina made a round-trip voyage to the Philippines, rounding the Cape of Good Hope in both directions. During the voyage he was promoted to frigate-lieutenant (teniente de fragata). In January 1780 he was in the Battle of Cape Santa Maria and shortly thereafter was promoted to ship's lieutenant (teniente de navío). During the Great Siege of Gibraltar, in September 1782, Malaspina served on a "floating battery." In December of the same year, aboard the San Justo, Malaspina participated in the fighting at Cape Espartel. He was soon promoted once again, to frigate-captain (capitán de fragata).[2]

In 1782 he was suspected of heresy and denounced to the Spanish Inquisition, but was not apprehended.[citation needed]

From March 1783, to July 1784, Malaspina was second-in-command of the frigate Asunción during a trip to the Philippines. As with his first trip to the Philippines the route went by the Cape of Good Hope in both directions. In 1785, back in Spain, Malaspina, on board the brigantine Vivo, took part in hydrographic surveys and mapping of parts of the coast of Spain. During the same year he was named Lieutenant of the Company of the Guardiamarinas of Cádiz.[2]

Circumnavigation edit

 
Spanish Landing Site, Bauza Island, New Zealand

From 15 September 1786 to 18 May 1788 Malaspina made a commercial circumnavigation of the world on behalf of the Royal Company of the Philippines.[3] During this voyage he was in command of the frigate Astrea.[4] His route went via Cape Horn and, returning, the Cape of Good Hope.[2] In February 1787, the Astrea called at Concepción in Chile, whose military governor, the Irish-born Ambrosio O'Higgins, had six months before recommended that Spain organize an expedition to the Pacific similar to those led by Lapérouse and Cook.[5] O'Higgins had made this recommendation following the visit of the Lapérouse expedition to Concepcion in March 1786, and presumably discussed it with Malaspina while the Astrea was at Concepcion. Following the Astrea's return to Spain, Malaspina, in partnership with José de Bustamante and advised by Francisco Muñoz y San Clemente, produced a proposal for an expedition along the lines set out in OHiggins's memorandum. A short time later, on 14 October 1788, Malaspina was informed of the government's acceptance of his plan. José de Espinoza y Tello, one of the officers of the Malaspina expedition, subsequently confirmed the importance of the information sent by O'Higgins in stimulating the Government to initiate an extensive program of exploration in the Pacific.[6] The prompt acceptance of Malaspina's proposal was stimulated by news that the Russian government was preparing the Mulovsky expedition to the North Pacific, which had as one objective the claiming of territory around Nootka Sound that was also claimed by Spain (see Nootka Crisis and Spanish expeditions to the Pacific Northwest).[7]

Expedition of 1789–1794 edit

In September 1788, Alessandro Malaspina and José de Bustamante y Guerra approached the Spanish government. The explorers proposed a scientific-political expedition that would visit nearly all the Spanish possessions in America and Asia. The Spanish king, Charles III, a promoter of science in the Spanish Empire, approved.

Two corvettes were built under Malaspina's direction specifically for the expedition: Descubierta and Atrevida (meaning "Discovery" and "Daring" or "Bold").[8] Malaspina commanded Descubierta and Bustamante Atrevida. The names were chosen by Malaspina to honor James Cook's Discovery and Resolution.[2] The two corvettes were constructed by the shipbuilder Tómas Muñoz at the La Carraca shipyard. They were both 306 tons burden and 36 metres long, with a normal load displacement of 4.2 metres. They were launched together on April 8, 1789.[9]

The expedition was under the "dual command" of Malaspina and Bustamante. Although in time the expedition became known as the Malaspina's, Bustamante was never considered subordinate. Malaspina insisted on their equality, yet Bustamante early acknowledged Malaspina as the "chief of the expedition."[10]

 
This map shows the route of Malaspina's ship Descubierta with the return to Spain from Tonga omitted. The route of Bustamante's Atrevida was mostly the same, but deviated in some places.

The expedition sailed from Cádiz on July 30, 1789. The bohemian naturalist Thaddäus Haenke missed the boat, but joined in 1790 in Santiago de Chile after crossing South America by land from Montevideo.

The expedition had explicitly scientific goals, as had the recent voyages of James Cook and Jean-François de Galaup, comte de La Pérouse. Some of the leading scientists of the day accompanied Malaspina. The scientific data collected during the expedition surpassed that of Cook, but due to changed political circumstances in Spain Malaspina was jailed upon return and the reports and collections locked up and banned from publication. The expedition and its findings remained obscure and nearly unstudied by historians until the late 20th century.[11]

Malaspina stopped at Montevideo and Buenos Aires, investigating the political situation of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata. After rounding Cape Horn, the expedition stopped at Talcahuano, the port of Concepción in present-day Chile, and again at Valparaíso, the port of Santiago. Continuing north, Bustamante mapped the coast while Malaspina sailed to the Juan Fernández Islands in order to resolve conflicting data on their location. The two captains reunited at Callao, the port of Lima. There investigations were made into the political situation of the Viceroyalty of Peru. The expedition then continued north, mapping the coast, to Acapulco, Mexico. A team of officers was sent to Mexico City to investigate the archives and political situation of the Viceroyalty of New Spain.

By the time Malaspina reached Mexico it was 1791, and there he received a dispatch from the king of Spain, ordering him to search for a Northwest Passage in the region of latitude 60 degrees N, newly thought to have been discovered many years previously. Malaspina had been planning to sail to Hawaii and Kamchatka, as well as the Pacific Northwest.[12] Instead, he sailed from Acapulco directly to Yakutat Bay, Alaska (then known as Port Mulgrave), where the rumored passage was said to exist. Finding only an inlet, he carefully surveyed the Alaskan coast west to Prince William Sound.[8]

At Yakutat Bay, the expedition made contact with the Tlingit. Spanish scholars made a study of the tribe, recording information on social mores, language, economy, warfare methods, and burial practices. Artists with the expedition, Tomas de Suria and José Cardero, produced portraits of tribal members and scenes of Tlingit daily life. A glacier between Yakutat Bay and Icy Bay was subsequently named after Malaspina. The botanist Luis Née also accompanied the expedition, during which he collected and described numerous new plants.

Knowing that Cook had previously surveyed the coast west of Prince William Sound and found no passage, Malaspina ceased his search at that point and sailed to the Spanish outpost at Nootka Sound on Vancouver Island.

Malaspina's expedition spent a fortnight at Nootka Sound. While at Nootka, the expedition's scientists made a study of the Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootka peoples). The relationship between the Spanish and the Nootkas was at its lowest point when Malaspina arrived. Malaspina and his crew were able greatly to improve the relationship, which was one of their objectives and reasons for stopping in the first place. Owing in part to Malaspina's ability to bequeath generous gifts from his well-supplied ships about to return to Mexico, the friendship between the Spanish and the Nootkas was strengthened. The gaining of the Nootka chief Maquinna's trust was particularly significant, as he was one of the most powerful chiefs of the region and had been very wary of the Spanish when Malaspina arrived. His friendship strengthened the Spanish claim to Nootka Sound, which was in question after the Nootka Crisis and resolved in the subsequent Nootka Conventions. The Spanish government was eager for the Nootka to agree formally that the land upon which the Spanish outpost stood had been ceded freely and legally. This desire had to do with Spain's negotiations with Britain than over Nootka Sound and the Pacific Northwest. Malaspina was able to acquire exactly what the government wanted. After weeks of negotiations the principal Nootka chief, Maquinna, agreed that the Spanish would always remain owners of the land they then occupied, and that they had acquired it with all due propriety. The outcome of the Nootka Convention depended in part on this pact.[13]

In addition to the expedition's work with the Nootkas, astronomical observations were made to fix the location of Nootka Sound and calibrate the expedition's chronometers. Nootka Sound was surveyed and mapped with an accuracy far greater than had previously been available. Unexplored channels were investigated. The maps were also linked to the baseline established by Captain Cook, allowing calibration between Spanish and British charts. Botanical studies were carried out, including an attempt to make a type of beer out of spruce needles that was hoped to have anti-scorbutic properties for combating scurvy. The expedition ships took on water and wood, and provided the Spanish outpost with many useful goods, including medicines, food, various tools and utensils, and a Réaumur scale thermometer.[14]

After departing Nootka Sound the two ships sailed south, stopping at the Spanish settlement and mission at Monterey, California, before returning to Mexico.

In 1792, back in Mexico, Malaspina dispatched two schooners (or "goletas") to conduct more detailed explorations of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Strait of Georgia. These were Sutíl, commanded by Dionisio Alcalá Galiano, and Mexicana, under Cayetano Valdés y Flores.[8] Both were officers subordinate to Malaspina. The ships were to have been commanded by two pilots of San Blas, Mexico, but Malaspina arranged for his own officers to replace them.

In 1792, Malaspina's expedition sailed from Mexico across the Pacific Ocean. They stopped briefly at Guam before arriving at the Philippines, where they spent several months, mostly at Manila. During this period Malaspina sent Bustamante in the Atrevida to Macau, China.

After Bustamante's return the expedition left the Philippines and sailed to New Zealand. They explored Doubtful Sound at the southern end of New Zealand's South Island, mapping and carrying out gravity experiments.[15] Then Malaspina sailed to Port Jackson (Sydney). on the coast of New South Wales Australia, which had been established by the British in 1788.[16] During the expedition's stay at Sydney Cove, New South Wales, in March–April 1793, Thaddäus Haenke carried out observations and made collections relating to the natural history of the place, as he reported to the colony's patron, Sir Joseph Banks, saying: "I here express the public testimony of a grateful soul for the very extraordinary humanity and kindness with which the English in their new Colony welcomed us wandering vagabonds, Ulysses' companions. A Nation renowned throughout the world, which has left nothing untried, will also overcome with the happiest omens, by the most assiduous labour and by its own determined spirit the great obstacles opposing it in the foundation of what may one day become another Rome."[17]

During its visit to Port Jackson, twelve drawings were done by members of the expedition, which are a valuable record of the settlement in its early years, especially as among them are the only depictions of the convict settlers from this period.[18]

The recently founded English colony had been included in the expedition's itinerary in response to a memorandum drawn up in September 1788 by one of Malaspina's fellow naval officers, Francisco Muñoz y San Clemente, who warned of the dangers it posed to the Spanish possessions in the Pacific in peacetime from the development of a contraband commerce and in war time as a base for British naval operations. Muñoz said: "The colonists will be able to fit out lucrative privateers so as to cut all communication between the Philippines and both Americas.... These possessions will have a navy of their own, obtaining from the Southern region whatever is necessary to establish it, and when they have it ready formed they will be able to invade our nearby possessions ..."[19] In the confidential report he wrote following his visit, Malaspina echoed the warning from Muñoz, writing of the "terrible" future danger for Spain from the English colony at Port Jackson,

from whence with the greatest ease a crossing of two or three months through healthy climates, and a secure navigation, could bring to our defenceless coasts two or three thousand castaway bandits to serve interpolated with an excellent body of regular troops. It would not be surprising that in this case—the women also sharing the risks as well as the sensual pleasures of the men—the history of the invasions of the Huns and Alans in the most fertile provinces of Europe would be revived in our surprised colonies....The pen trembles to record the image, however distant, of such disorders.

While recognizing the strategic threat it posed to Spain's Pacific possessions in time of war, Malaspina wrote: "It is not the concern of these paragraphs to demonstrate in detail the many schemes for these projected plunderings, so much as the easiest ways of preventing them." He preferred the peaceable approach of drawing attention to the commercial opportunity the new colony offered for a trade in food and livestock from Chile and the development of a viable trade route linking that country with the Philippines. Having seen carts and even ploughs being drawn by convicts for want of draught animals in the colony, and having eaten meals with the colonists at which beef and mutton were regarded as rare luxuries, Malaspina saw the trade in Chilean livestock as the key to a profitable commerce. He proposed that an agreement be signed with London for an Association of Traders, and for an agent of the colony to be resident in Chile. Conscious that the policy he was proposing was a bold and imaginative one in the face of Spain's traditional insistence on a national monopoly of trade and other relations within her empire, Malaspina declared that "this affair is exceedingly favourable to the commercial balance of our Colonies," and it would have the advantage of calming and tranquilizing "a lively, turbulent and even insolent neighbour....not with sacrifices on our part but rather with many and very considerable profits."[20]

Returning east across the Pacific Ocean the expedition spent a month at Vava'u, the northern archipelago of Tonga. From there they sailed to Callao, Peru, then Talcahuanco, Chile. The fjords of southern Chile were carefully mapped before the expedition rounded Cape Horn. Then they surveyed the Falkland Islands (Spanish: Islas Malvinas) and the coast of Patagonia before stopping again at Montevideo.

From Montevideo Malaspina took a long route through the central Atlantic Ocean to Spain, reaching Cádiz on September 21, 1794. He had spent 62 months at sea.[2][21]

During the five years of this expedition Malaspina fixed the measurements of America's western coast with a precision never before achieved. He measured the height of Mount Saint Elias in Alaska and explored gigantic glaciers, including Malaspina Glacier, later named after him. He demonstrated the feasibility of a possible Panama Canal and outlined plans for its construction.[22] In addition, Malaspina's expedition was the first major long distance sea voyage that experienced virtually no scurvy. Malaspina's medical officer, Pedro González, was convinced that fresh oranges and lemons were essential for preventing scurvy. Only one outbreak occurred, during a 56-day trip across the open sea. Five sailors came down with symptoms, one seriously. After three days at Guam all five were healthy again. James Cook had made great progress against the disease, but other British captains, such as George Vancouver, found his accomplishment difficult to replicate. It had been known since the mid-18th century that citrus fruit was effective, but for decades it was impractical to store fruit or fruit juice for long periods on ships without losing the necessary ascorbic acid. Spain's large empire and many ports of call made it easier to acquire fresh fruit.[23]

Political controversy and exile edit

 
Alessandro Malaspina by José María Galván

In December 1794 Malaspina met with King Charles IV and Prime Minister Manuel de Godoy. At first all was well and Malaspina was promoted to fleet-brigadier in March 1795.[2]

In September 1795, he sent his writings to the Spanish government, but the latter judged their publication to be inopportune in the then existing political situation. Disenchanted, Malaspina led a philosophical-literary polemic in the Madrid press on the meaning of beauty in nature,[24] and at the same time took part in a secret conspiracy to overthrow Manuel Godoy.[25] In his examination of the political situation in the Spanish colonies Malaspina had decided that Spain should free its colonies and form a confederation of states bound by international trade.[8] In September 1795 he began trying to influence the Spanish government with such proposals. Unfortunately Malaspina had lost the support he used to have at the royal court before his voyage and the political situation had changed radically, due in part to the French Revolution. He was accused by Prime Minister Godoy of being part of a conspiracy to overthrow him, and arrested on November 23 on charges of plotting against the state.[25] After an inconclusive trial on April 20, 1796, Charles IV decreed that Malaspina be stripped of rank and imprisoned in the isolated fortress of San Antón in La Coruña, Galicia. Malaspina remained in the prison from 1796 to 1802. During his incarceration he wrote a variety of essays on topics such as aesthetics,[26] economics, and literary criticism.[2] Francesco Melzi d'Eril and later, through him, Napoleon campaigned for Malaspina's release. He was finally freed at the end of 1802 but was exiled from Spain. He left for his hometown of Mulazzo via the port of Genoa, and settled in nearby Pontremoli.

Because of Spain's conflict with revolutionary France, there were no funds in the naval budget for publishing his seven-volume account of the 1789–94 expeditions: it remained unpublished until the late 19th century (apart from a Russian translation by Adam von Krusenstern in successive issues of the official journal of the Russian Admiralty between 1824 and 1827).[27] A large portion of the documents meant to be used as source material for the publication of Malaspina's expedition remained scattered in archives to the present day. A significant number of documents are lost, and those that survive are often in a rough, semi-edited form. Alexander von Humboldt, an admirer of Malaspina, wrote, "this able navigator is more famous for his misfortunes than for his discoveries."[28] There was some contemporary publication, but it took two hundred years for the bulk of the records of the expedition to be published. The notes made by the expedition's botanist, Luis Née, while he was at Port Jackson in 1793, were published in 1800.[29] Dionisio Alcalá Galiano's journal of his survey of the straits between Vancouver Island and the mainland, carried out as part of the Malaspina expedition, was published in 1802 with all mention of Malaspina's name excised.[30] In 1809, José Espinosa y Tello published the astronomical and geodesic observations made during the expedition in a two-volume work that also contained an abbreviated narrative of the voyage.[31] This narrative was translated into Russian and published by Admiral Adam von Krusenstern in St. Petersburg in 1815.[32] The journal of Malaspina's voyage was first published in Russian translation by Krusenstern in successive issues of the official journal of the Russian Admiralty between 1824 and 1827 (a copy of the manuscript had been obtained by the Russian ambassador in Madrid in 1806).[33] The journal of Francisco Xavier de Viana, second-in-command of the Atrevida, was published in Montevideo in 1849.[34] Bustamante's journal was published in 1868 in the official journal of the Directorate of Hydrography.[35] An abbreviated account of the Malaspina expedition, consisting mostly of his journal, "Diario de Viaje," was published in Madrid in 1885 by Pedro de Novo y Colson.[36] Malaspina's journal was published in another edition in Madrid in 1984.[37] The definitive version of the expedition was finally published in Spain by the Museo Naval and Ministerio de Defensa in nine volumes from 1987 to 1999.[38] The second volume of this series, Malaspina's journal, was published in an annotated English translation by the Hakluyt Society in association with the Museo Naval between 2001 and 2005.[39]

The drawings and paintings done by members of the expedition were described by Carmen Sotos Serrano in 1982.[40] The 4,000-odd manuscripts relating to the expedition were catalogued by María Dolores Higueras Rodríguez between 1989 and 1994.[41]

Later life edit

In Pontremoli, which by then was part of the short-lived Kingdom of Etruria, Malaspina concerned himself with local politics. In December 1803 he organized a quarantine between the Napoleonic Italian Republic and the Kingdom of Etruria during a yellow fever epidemic in Livorno. In 1805 he received the title of Advising Auditor of the Council of State of the Kingdom of Italy. The Queen of Etruria received him at court in December 1806. Shortly afterwards he was admitted to the Columban Society in Florence with the title of Addomesticato.[2]

The first appearance of an incurable illness occurred in 1807.[2] Alessandro Malaspina died in Pontremoli on April 9, 1810, at the age of 55.[8] His death was noted in the Gazzetta di Genova, 18 April 1810:

Pontremoli, 9 April 1810: Today at 10 o'clock in the evening the learned and famous navigator Signore Alexandro Malaspina of Mulazzo passed from this life. Such a loss cannot fail to be felt far and wide by all those who, placing high value on the importance of the nautical and travel accounts of this most talented Italian, have known his equanimity in both good and bad fortune; it is without doubt most bitter for those who witnessed the end from close by and who, moreover, had to admire his fortitude in suffering patiently to the very last the most severe pains of a long intestinal illness.[42]

Legacy edit

Malaspina University-College and in the Canadian city of Nanaimo, British Columbia took their names indirectly from the explorer (although these names have been recently changed to Vancouver Island University and the High School at VIU), by way of Malaspina Strait, between Texada Island and the mainland, and the Malaspina Peninsula and adjoining Malaspina Inlet nearby, which are the location of Malaspina Provincial Park and are part of the Sunshine Coast region. Vancouver Island University is home to the Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre.

There is also a Malaspina Peak and Malaspina Lake near Nootka Sound on Vancouver Island, just southeast of the town of Gold River; and the well-known Malaspina Glacier in southern Alaska.

In New Zealand, Malaspina Reach of Doubtful Sound in Fiordland, explored by him in 1793, has his name.[43]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Kendrick, John (2003). Alejandro Malaspina: Portrait of a Visionary. McGill-Queen's Press. p. xi. ISBN 0-7735-2652-8.; online at Google Books; Malaspina usually spelt his name “Alexandro”, a form which, as well as being standard orthography in his day, would have had the advantage for him of being pronounceable in both Italian and Spanish. On occasion, he also used the forms “Alessandro” or “Alejandro”. When he wrote in English, he signed himself “Alexander”, and when writing in French, “Alexandre”: this was in accord with the convention of the day, where names were translated into the language being used. He used the variant spellings according to the language in which he was writing. Changes in Spanish orthography made since his time by the Real Academia Española have made “Alejandro” the standard form in Spanish, and likewise the orthographic rules of the Accademia della Repubblica Italiana make the modern standard Italian form “Alessandro”. for writers in English, “Alexandro” has the convenience of obviating the need to choose between the exclusively Italian and Spanish versions of his name.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k John Black & Dario Manfredi. "A Biography of Alexandro Malaspina". Malaspina University-College. from the original on 29 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
  3. ^ Kendrick, John (2003). Alejandro Malaspina: Portrait of a Visionary. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780773526525.
  4. ^ Dario Manfredi, Il Viaggio Attorno al Mondo di Malaspina con la Fregata di S.M.C.«Astrea», 1786–1788, Memorie della Accademia Lunigianese di Scienze, La Spezia, 1988.
  5. ^ Archivo Histórico Nacional (Madrid), Estado, legajo 4289. Also at Archivo Nacional de Chile, Fondo Vicuña Mackenna, vol.304, D, ff.5–26. Published in Revista chilena de historia y geografía, no.107, 1946, pp.387–401.
  6. ^ "Noticia de las principales expediciones hechas por nuestras pilotos del Departamiento de San Blas al reconocimiento de la costa noroeste de America, desde el año de 1774 hasta el 1791, extractada de los diarios originales de aquellos navegantes", Novo y Colson, Viaje, p.428; cited in Warren L. Cook, Flood Tide of Empire, New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1973, p.115, and in Robert J. King, "Ambrose Higgins and the Malaspina Expedition", presented at the International Conference of the Association of Iberian and Latin American Studies of Australasia (AILASA 99), La Trobe University, Melbourne, July 1999. At: . Archived from the original on 2010-08-19. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  7. ^ Pedro Normande to Floridablanca, St. Petersburg, 16 February 1787, Archivo Histórico Nacional (Madrid), Estado, legajo 4289; copy held at Library of Congress Manuscripts Division, Foreign Copying Project Reproductions; quoted in Anthony H. Hull, Spanish and Russian Rivalry in the North Pacific Regions of the New World, University of Alabama PhD thesis, UMI microfilm, pp.113–7; and in Warren L. Cook, Flood Tide of Empire: Spain and the Pacific Northwest, 1543 1819, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1973, p.116.
  8. ^ a b c d e . Malaspina University-College. Archived from the original on 2008-09-04. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
  9. ^ Cutter, Donald C. (1991). Malaspina & Galiano: Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast, 1791 & 1792. University of Washington Press. p. 3. ISBN 0-295-97105-3.
  10. ^ Cutter, Donald C. (1991). Malaspina & Galiano: Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast, 1791 & 1792. University of Washington Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0-295-97105-3.
  11. ^ Fernandez-Armesto, Felipe (2006). Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration. W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 305–307. ISBN 0-393-06259-7.
  12. ^ Kendrick, John (2003). Alejandro Malaspina: Portrait of a Visionary. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 52. ISBN 0-7735-2652-8.; online at Google Books
  13. ^ Cutter, Donald C. (1991). Malaspina & Galiano: Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast, 1791 & 1792. University of Washington Press. pp. 105, 109. ISBN 0-295-97105-3.
  14. ^ Cutter, Donald C. (1991). Malaspina & Galiano: Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast, 1791 & 1792. University of Washington Press. pp. 75–76, 108–109. ISBN 0-295-97105-3.
  15. ^ Robert J. King, "Puerto del Pendulo, Doubtful Sound: The Malaspina Expedition’s Visit to New Zealand in Quest of the True Figure of the Earth", The Globe, no.65, 2010, pp.1–18. Downloadable at: http://search.informit.com.au.
  16. ^ Robert J. King, The Secret History of the Convict Colony: Alexandro Malaspina's report on the British settlement of New South Wales, Sydney, Allen & Unwin Australia, 1990. ISBN 0-04-610020-2
  17. ^ Robert J. King and Victoria Ibáñez, "A Letter from Thaddaeus Haenke to Sir Joseph Banks, Sydney Cove, 15 April 1793", Archives of Natural History, vol.23, no.2, 1996, pp.255–259.
  18. ^ Robert Langdon, "They Came to Spy on Sydney", The Sydney Morning Herald, 7 April 1962; Carmen Sotos Serrano, "Nuevas obras de Fernando Brambila en Londres", Homenaje al Profesor Hernández Perera, Madrid, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 1992, pp.453–8. Peter Barber, "Malaspina and George III, Brambila, and Watling: Three discovered drawings of Sydney and Parramatta by Fernando Brambila", Australian Journal of Art, Vol.XI, 1993, pp.31–55.
  19. ^ Robert J. King, "Francisco Muñoz y San Clemente and his Reflexions on the English Settlements of New Holland", British Library Journal, vol. 25, no.1, 1999, pp.55–76.
  20. ^ Robert J. King, "Science and Spycraft: The Malaspina Expedition in New Zealand and New South Wales, 1793", Mains’l Haul, A Journal of Pacific Maritime History, vols.41 no.4 & 42, no.1, Fall/Winter 2006, pp.76–87. Also at: . Archived from the original on 2010-08-19. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  21. ^ Lorenzo Sanfeliú Ortiz, 62 Meses A Bordo: La expedición Malaspina según el diario del Teniente de Navío Don Antonio de Tova Arredondo, 2.o Comandante de la "Atrevida" 1789–1794, Madrid, Biblioteca de Camarote «Revista General de Marina», 1943 y Editorial Naval, 1988.
  22. ^ Caso, Adolph; Marion E. Welsh (1978). They Too Made America Great. Branden Books. p. 72. ISBN 0-8283-1714-3.; online at Internet Archive
  23. ^ Fernandez-Armesto, Felipe (2006). Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration. W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 297–298. ISBN 0-393-06259-7.
  24. ^ Sánchez Arteaga, Juanma (2022). Lo bello en la naturaleza. Alejandro Malaspina : estética, filosofía natural y blancura en el ocaso de la Ilustración (1795-1803). Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. ISBN 978-84-00-11002-4.
  25. ^ a b Sánchez Arteaga, Juanma (2021). "De las tertulias a la conspiración: la disputa por la belleza y las amistades peligrosas de Alejandro Malaspina en Madrid". Asclepio. Revista de historia de la medicina y de la ciencia. 73 (2): 570–583. doi:10.3989/asclepio.2021.28. S2CID 244096152.
  26. ^ Black, John (2011). "Malaspina's Meditation on Beauty in Nature": 18 pg. doi:10.25316/IR-2741. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ Pedro de Novo y Colson, Viaje politico cientifico alrededor del mundo por las corbetas Descubierta y Atrevida, al mando de los capitanes de navio, don Alejandro Malaspina y don José de Bustamante y Guerra, desde 1789 a 1794, Madrid, 1885; Mª Dolores Higueras Rodriguez, Diario General del Viaje Corbeta Atrevida por José Bustamante y Guerra, Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789-1794, Tomo IX, Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1999, p.48; «Путешествіе въ Южно море, къ Западнимъ берегамъ Америки и островамъ Маріанскимъ и Фнлипинскимъ, совершенное подъ командою Каролевско-Испанского Флота Капитановъ Малеспини и Бустаманте», (‘Voyage to the South Sea, West coast of America and the Mariana and Philippine islands, under the overall command of Spanish Royal Navy Captains Malaspina and Bustamante’), Записки, издаваемыя Государственнымъ Адмиралтейскимъ Департментомъ, относящiяся къ Мореплаванію, Наукамъ и Словесности (Zapiski, izdavayemiya Gosudarstvennim Admiralteiskim Departmentom, otnosyashchiyasya k' Moryeplavaniyu, Naukam i Slovesnosti / Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation, Science and Literature), VI, 1824, pp.188-276; VII, 1824, pp.121-223; VIII, 1825, pp.176-272; IX, 1825, pp.1-292; XII, 1827, pp.29-191, 29-191; XIII, 1827, pp.10-178.
  28. ^ Vaughan, Thomas; E.A.P. Crownhart-Vaughan; Mercedes Palau de Iglesias (1977). Voyages of Enlightenment: Malaspina on the Northwest Coast. Oregon Historical Society. p. 16.
  29. ^ Antonio Joseph Cavanilles, "Observaciones sobre el suelo, naturales y plantas de Puerto Jackson y Bahia Botanica", Anales de Historia Natural, No.3, 1800; translated into German by Christian Augustus Fischer, "Die Spanier in Neu Sud Wallis", Spanische Miszellen, Berlin, 1803 and Dresden, 1804, pp.3 25, and by Fischer into French, "Visite des Espagnols à la Nouvelle Galles Meridionale: Fragment d'un Voyage inédit de Malaspina", Annales des Voyages, de la Géographie et de l'Histoire, Paris, Tome IX X, 1809, pp.340 355.
  30. ^ Dionisio Alcalá Galiano, Relación del Viage, hecho por las Goletas Sutil y Mexicana, en el año 1792 para reconocer el Estrecho de Juan de Fuca, Madrid, 1802.
  31. ^ Josef Espinosa y Tello, Memorias sobre las Obervaciones Astronomicas, hechas por los Navegantes Españoles en Distintos Lugares del Globo, Madrid, Imprenta Real, Tomos I & II, 1809.
  32. ^ «Извѣстіе о Испанской Экспедиціи Предпринятой лдя Откытіи въ 1791, 1792 и 1793 годахъ подъ командою Капитана Малеспине», Записки, издаваемыя Государственнымъ Адмиралтейскимъ Департментомъ, относящiяся къ Мореплаванію, Наукамъ и Словесности (‘News on the Spanish Discovery Expedition of 1791, 1792 and 1793 commanded by Captain Malespina’, Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation, Science and Literature), II, 1815, pp.256–260. During his own voyage to the North Pacific of 1803 to 1806, Krusenstern surveyed the west coast of Japan in May 1805 and on his resulting chart made the generous gesture of naming a prominent cape on the coast of Hokkaido "after the unfortunate Spanish navigator Malespina [sic]" (A.J. von Krusenstern, Voyage round the World, translated by Richard Belgrave Hoppner, London, John Murray, 1813, Vol.II, p.38). This cape already bore the Japanese name, Tampake Misaki (now Ofuyu Misaki, the northern point of Ishikari Bay) and Krusenstern’s "Cape Malespina" failed to replace the Japanese name on the charts.
  33. ^ «Путешествіе въ Южно море, къ Западнимъ берегамъ Америки и островамъ Маріанскимъ и Фнлипинскимъ, совершенное подъ командою Каролевско-Испанского Флота Капитановъ Малеспини и Бустаманте», (‘Voyage to the South Sea, West coast of America and the Mariana and Philippine islands, under the overall command of Spanish Royal Navy Captains Malaspina and Bustamante’), Записки, издаваемыя Государственнымъ Адмиралтейскимъ Департментомъ, относящiяся къ Мореплаванію, Наукамъ и Словесности (Zapiski, izdavayemiya Gosudarstvennim Admiralteiskim Departmentom, otnosyashchiyasya k' Moryeplavaniyu, Naukam i Slovesnosti / Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation, Science and Literature), VI, 1824, pp.188–276; VII, 1824, pp.121–223; VIII, 1825, pp.176–272; IX, 1825, pp.1–292; XII, 1827, pp.29–191 Записки, XII; XIII, 1827, pp.10–178 Записки, XIII. Dario Manfredi, «Sulla Prima Edizione del Viaggio di Malaspina, S. Pietroburgo, 1824–1827», Giovanni Caboto e le Vie dell’Atlantico settentrionale, Genova, Centro italiano per gli Studi storico-geografici, 1999, pp.485–159.
  34. ^ Francisco Xavier de Viana, Diario del viage explorador de las corbetas expañolas "Descubierta" y "Atrevida", Montevideo, Cerrito de la Victoria, 1849.
  35. ^ J. Bustamante y Guerra, "Relación…", Anuario de la Dirrección de Hidrografía, Madrid, vol.VI, 1868, pp.240–364.
  36. ^ Museo Naval MS 753; Pedro de Novo y Colson (ed.), Viaje politico cientifico alrededor del mundo por las corbetas Descubierta y Atrevida, al mando de los capitanes de navio, don Alejandro Malaspina y don José de Bustamante y Guerra, desde 1789 a 1794, Madrid, 1885. The section of this work relating to the visit to Dusky Sound was published in Robert McNab, Murihiku and the Southern Islands, Invercargill, William South, 1907, pp.49–56; and in Historical Records of New Zealand, 1908, Vol.I, pp.417 29.
  37. ^ Mercedes Palau, Aránzazu Zabala and Blanca Sáiz (eds.), Viaje politico y cientifico a la América Meridional, a las costas del mar Pacífico y a las Islas Marianas y Filipinas, Ediciones El Museo Universal, Madrid, 1984.
  38. ^ Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Barcelona, Lunwerg, tomos 1–9, 1987–1999.
  39. ^ The Malaspina Expedition, 1789–1794: the Journal of the Voyage by Alejandro Malaspina, Andrew David, Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, Carlos Novi and Glyndwr Williams (eds.), translated by Sylvia Jamieson, London and Madrid, Hakluyt Society in association with the Museo Naval, 3rd series, no.8, Volume I, 2001, no.11, Volume II, 2003 and no.13, Volume III, 2005.
  40. ^ Carmen Sotos Serrano, Los Pintores de la Expedición de Alejandro Malaspina, Madrid, Real Academia de la Historia, 1982.
  41. ^ Mª Dolores Higueras Rodríguez, Catálogo crítico de los documentos de la Expedición Malaspina en el Museo Naval, three volumes, Madrid, Museo Naval, 1989–1994.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-12. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
  43. ^ Robert J. King, "Puerto del Pendulo, Doubtful Sound: The Malaspina Expedition’s Visit to New Zealand in Quest of the True Figure of the Earth", The Globe, no.65, 2010, pp.1-18.[1]

Bibliography edit

English

  • Iris H.W. Engstrand, Spanish Scientists in the New World: The Eighteenth Century Expeditions, Seattle, Univ. Washington Press, 1981.
  • Edith C. Galbraith, "Malaspina's Voyage around the World", California Historical Society Quarterly, vol.3, no.3, October 1924, pp. 215 37.
  • Robin Inglis (ed.), Spain and the North Pacific Coast, Vancouver Maritime Museum Society, 1992.
  • Robin Inglis, "Successors and rivals to Cook: the French and the Spaniards", in Glyndwr Williams (ed.), Captain Cook: Explorations and Assessments, Woodbridge, The Boydell Press, 2004, pp. 161–178.

Non-English

  • Juanma Sánchez Arteaga (2022). Lo bello en la naturaleza. Alejandro Malaspina : estética, filosofía natural y blancura en el ocaso de la Ilustración (1795-1803). Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. ISBN 978-84-00-11002-4.
  • Mariana Cuesta Domingo, "Espinosa y Tello y su viaje complementario al de Malaspina," in Paz Martin Ferrero (ed.), Actas del simposium CCL aniversario nacimiento de Joseph Celestino Mutis, Cádiz, Diputación Provincial de Cádiz, 1986, pp. 197–204.
  • Mª Dolores Higueras Rodriguez, Diario General del Viaje Corbeta Atrevida por José Bustamante y Guerra, Museo Naval Ministerio de Defensa La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Tomo IX, Madrid y Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1999.
  • Victoria Ibáñez, Trabajos Cientificos y Correspondencia de Tadeo Haenke, Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Tomo IV, Madrid y Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1992.
  • Dario Manfredi, "Adam J. Krusenstern y la primera edición del viaje de Malaspina. San Petersburgo (1824–1827)", Derroteros de la Mar del Sur, (Lima), Año 8, núm.8, 2000, pp. 65–82.
  • Dario Manfredi, Italiano in Spagna, Spagnolo in Italia: Alessandro Malaspina (1754–1810) e la più importante spedizione scientifica marittima del Secolo dei Luni, Torino, Nuova Eri Edizioni Rai, 1992.
  • Dario Manfredi, "Sulla Prima Edizione del Viaggio di Malaspina S. Pietroburgo, 1824–1827", Giovanni Caboto e le Vie dell’Atlantico settentrionale, Atti del Convegno Internazionale de Studi, Roma, 29 settembre-1 ottobre 1997, Genova-Brigati, Centro italiano per gli Studi storico-geografici, 1999, pp. 485–159.
  • Dario Manfredi, Alessandro Malaspina e Fabio Ala Ponzone: Lettere dal Vecchio e Nuovo Mondo (1788–1803), Bologna, il Mulino, 1999.
  • Dario Manfredi, "Sugli Studi e sulle Navigazioni ‘minori’di Alessandro Malaspina", Cronaca e Storia di Val di Magra, XVI-XVII, 1987–1988, p. 159.
  • Dario Manfredi, Il Viaggio Attorno al Mondo di Malaspina con la Fregata di S.M.C.«Astrea», 1786–1788, La Spezia, Memorie della Accademia Lunigianese di Scienze, 1988.
  • Luis Rafael Martínez-Cañavate, Trabajos Astronomicos, Geodesicos e Hidrograficos,Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Tomo VI, Madrid y Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1994.
  • Felix Muñoz Garmendia, Diario y Trabajos Botánicos de Luis Née, Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Tomo III, Madrid y Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1992.
  • Antonio Orozco Acuaviva (ed.), La Expedición Malaspina (1789–1794), Bicentenario de la Salida de Cádiz, Cádiz, Real Academia Hispano-Americana, 1989. In the contribution to this work by Pablo Anton Sole, "Los Padrones de Cumplimiento Pascual de la Expedición Malaspina: 1790–1794", pp. 173–238, the names of all of the 450 personnel who took part in the several stages of the expedition are listed.
  • Antonio Orozco Acuaviva et al. (eds.), Malaspina y Bustamante '94: II Jornadas Internacionales Conmemorativas del regreso de la Expedición a Cádiz, 1794–1994, Madrid, Rustica, 1996.
  • Mercedes Palau Baquero & Antonio Orozco Acuaviva (eds.), Malaspina '92: I Jornadas Internacionales – Madrid, Cádiz, La Coruña. 17–25 de Septiembre de 1992, Cádiz, Real Academia Hispano-Americana, 1994.
  • Juan Pimentel Igea, Examines Politicos, Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa, La Expedición Malaspina, 1789–1794, Tomo VII, Barcelona, Lunwerg Editores, 1996.
  • Blanca Saiz, Bibliografia sobre Alejandro Malaspina y acerca de la expedicion Malaspina y de los marinos y cientificos que en ella participaron, Ediciones El Museo Universal, Madrid, 1992.
  • Blanca Sáiz (ed.), Malaspina '93: Alessandro Malaspina e la sua spedizione scientifica (1789–1794). Atti del Congresso Internazionale, nel bicentenario della massima impresa di Alessandro Malaspina, tenutosi a Mulazzo, Castiglione del Terziere e Lerici dal 24 al 26 settembre 1993, Mulazzo, Centro di Studi Malaspiniani, 1995.
  • Emilio Soler Pascual, La Conspiración Malaspina, 1795–1796, Alicante, Instituto de Cultural"Juan Gil Albert", 1965 (Diputación Provincial, Col. Ensayo y Investigación: 32).
  • Emilio Soler Pascual y Asociación Cultural Dionisio Alcalá-Galiano, Trafalgar y Alcalá Galiano: jornadas internacionales, Cabra, 17 al 23 de octubre de 2005, Madrid, Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional, 2006, Series: Ciencias y humanismo.
  • Carlo Ferrari / Dario Manfredi, Dallo "Zibaldone Ferrari" nuovi elementi sulle letture di Alessandro Malaspina (1796-1810) Estratto dall'"Archivio Storico per le Province Parmensi". Quarta serie, vol. XL - Anno 1988.

External links edit

  • Biography by Dario Mandfredi
  • Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  • Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre. Vancouver Island University. https://web.viu.ca/black/amrc/index.htm Archive url: https://archive-it.org/collections/11555
  • Circumnavigation expedition Malaspina. Global change and exploration of the ocean's biodiversity [2]
  • Alessandro Malaspina. Polymath Virtual Library, Fundación Ignacio Larramendi

alejandro, malaspina, november, 1754, april, 1810, tuscan, explorer, spent, most, life, spanish, naval, officer, under, spanish, royal, commission, undertook, voyage, around, world, from, 1786, 1788, then, from, 1789, 1794, scientific, expedition, malaspina, e. Alejandro Malaspina November 5 1754 April 9 1810 was a Tuscan explorer who spent most of his life as a Spanish naval officer Under a Spanish royal commission he undertook a voyage around the world from 1786 to 1788 then from 1789 to 1794 a scientific expedition the Malaspina Expedition throughout the Pacific Ocean exploring and mapping much of the west coast of the Americas from Cape Horn to the Gulf of Alaska crossing to Guam and the Philippines and stopping in New Zealand Australia and Tonga Alejandro MalaspinaBirth nameAlessandro MalaspinaOther name s Alexandro MalaspinaBorn 1754 11 05 November 5 1754Mulazzo Grand Duchy of Tuscany Holy Roman EmpireDiedApril 9 1810 1810 04 09 aged 55 Pontremoli French EmpireAllegianceSpainService wbr branchNavy of SpainYears of service1774 1795RankBrigadierCommands heldMalaspina ExpeditionBattles warsGreat Siege of Gibraltar Malaspina was christened Alessandro the Italian form of Alexander He signed his letters in Spanish Alexandro which is usually modernized to Alejandro by scholars 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Naval service 3 Circumnavigation 4 Expedition of 1789 1794 5 Political controversy and exile 6 Later life 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 Notes and references 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life editMalaspina was born in Mulazzo a small principality ruled by his family then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany a fiefdom of the Holy Roman Empire Alessandro s parents were the Marquis Carlo Morello and Caterina Meli Lupi di Soragna From 1762 to 1765 his family lived in Palermo with Alessandro s great uncle Giovanni Fogliani Sforza d Aragona the viceroy of Sicily From 1765 to 1773 he studied at the Clementine College in Rome In 1773 he was accepted into the Order of Malta and spent about a year living on the island of Malta where he learned the basics of sailing Naval service editMalaspina entered the Royal Navy of Spain in 1774 and received the rank of Guardiamarina 2 Between 1774 and 1786 he took part in a number of naval battles and received many promotions In January 1775 aboard the frigate Santa Teresa Malaspina took part of the expedition to relieve Melilla which was under siege by Moroccans Shortly after he was promoted to frigate ensign alferez de fragata In July 1775 he participated the siege of Algiers and in 1776 was promoted to ship s ensign alferez de navio 2 From 1777 to 1779 aboard the frigate Astrea Malaspina made a round trip voyage to the Philippines rounding the Cape of Good Hope in both directions During the voyage he was promoted to frigate lieutenant teniente de fragata In January 1780 he was in the Battle of Cape Santa Maria and shortly thereafter was promoted to ship s lieutenant teniente de navio During the Great Siege of Gibraltar in September 1782 Malaspina served on a floating battery In December of the same year aboard the San Justo Malaspina participated in the fighting at Cape Espartel He was soon promoted once again to frigate captain capitan de fragata 2 In 1782 he was suspected of heresy and denounced to the Spanish Inquisition but was not apprehended citation needed From March 1783 to July 1784 Malaspina was second in command of the frigate Asuncion during a trip to the Philippines As with his first trip to the Philippines the route went by the Cape of Good Hope in both directions In 1785 back in Spain Malaspina on board the brigantine Vivo took part in hydrographic surveys and mapping of parts of the coast of Spain During the same year he was named Lieutenant of the Company of the Guardiamarinas of Cadiz 2 Circumnavigation edit nbsp Spanish Landing Site Bauza Island New Zealand From 15 September 1786 to 18 May 1788 Malaspina made a commercial circumnavigation of the world on behalf of the Royal Company of the Philippines 3 During this voyage he was in command of the frigate Astrea 4 His route went via Cape Horn and returning the Cape of Good Hope 2 In February 1787 the Astrea called at Concepcion in Chile whose military governor the Irish born Ambrosio O Higgins had six months before recommended that Spain organize an expedition to the Pacific similar to those led by Laperouse and Cook 5 O Higgins had made this recommendation following the visit of the Laperouse expedition to Concepcion in March 1786 and presumably discussed it with Malaspina while the Astrea was at Concepcion Following the Astrea s return to Spain Malaspina in partnership with Jose de Bustamante and advised by Francisco Munoz y San Clemente produced a proposal for an expedition along the lines set out in OHiggins s memorandum A short time later on 14 October 1788 Malaspina was informed of the government s acceptance of his plan Jose de Espinoza y Tello one of the officers of the Malaspina expedition subsequently confirmed the importance of the information sent by O Higgins in stimulating the Government to initiate an extensive program of exploration in the Pacific 6 The prompt acceptance of Malaspina s proposal was stimulated by news that the Russian government was preparing the Mulovsky expedition to the North Pacific which had as one objective the claiming of territory around Nootka Sound that was also claimed by Spain see Nootka Crisis and Spanish expeditions to the Pacific Northwest 7 Expedition of 1789 1794 editMain article Malaspina Expedition In September 1788 Alessandro Malaspina and Jose de Bustamante y Guerra approached the Spanish government The explorers proposed a scientific political expedition that would visit nearly all the Spanish possessions in America and Asia The Spanish king Charles III a promoter of science in the Spanish Empire approved Two corvettes were built under Malaspina s direction specifically for the expedition Descubierta and Atrevida meaning Discovery and Daring or Bold 8 Malaspina commanded Descubierta and Bustamante Atrevida The names were chosen by Malaspina to honor James Cook s Discovery and Resolution 2 The two corvettes were constructed by the shipbuilder Tomas Munoz at the La Carraca shipyard They were both 306 tons burden and 36 metres long with a normal load displacement of 4 2 metres They were launched together on April 8 1789 9 The expedition was under the dual command of Malaspina and Bustamante Although in time the expedition became known as the Malaspina s Bustamante was never considered subordinate Malaspina insisted on their equality yet Bustamante early acknowledged Malaspina as the chief of the expedition 10 nbsp This map shows the route of Malaspina s ship Descubierta with the return to Spain from Tonga omitted The route of Bustamante s Atrevida was mostly the same but deviated in some places The expedition sailed from Cadiz on July 30 1789 The bohemian naturalist Thaddaus Haenke missed the boat but joined in 1790 in Santiago de Chile after crossing South America by land from Montevideo The expedition had explicitly scientific goals as had the recent voyages of James Cook and Jean Francois de Galaup comte de La Perouse Some of the leading scientists of the day accompanied Malaspina The scientific data collected during the expedition surpassed that of Cook but due to changed political circumstances in Spain Malaspina was jailed upon return and the reports and collections locked up and banned from publication The expedition and its findings remained obscure and nearly unstudied by historians until the late 20th century 11 Malaspina stopped at Montevideo and Buenos Aires investigating the political situation of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata After rounding Cape Horn the expedition stopped at Talcahuano the port of Concepcion in present day Chile and again at Valparaiso the port of Santiago Continuing north Bustamante mapped the coast while Malaspina sailed to the Juan Fernandez Islands in order to resolve conflicting data on their location The two captains reunited at Callao the port of Lima There investigations were made into the political situation of the Viceroyalty of Peru The expedition then continued north mapping the coast to Acapulco Mexico A team of officers was sent to Mexico City to investigate the archives and political situation of the Viceroyalty of New Spain By the time Malaspina reached Mexico it was 1791 and there he received a dispatch from the king of Spain ordering him to search for a Northwest Passage in the region of latitude 60 degrees N newly thought to have been discovered many years previously Malaspina had been planning to sail to Hawaii and Kamchatka as well as the Pacific Northwest 12 Instead he sailed from Acapulco directly to Yakutat Bay Alaska then known as Port Mulgrave where the rumored passage was said to exist Finding only an inlet he carefully surveyed the Alaskan coast west to Prince William Sound 8 At Yakutat Bay the expedition made contact with the Tlingit Spanish scholars made a study of the tribe recording information on social mores language economy warfare methods and burial practices Artists with the expedition Tomas de Suria and Jose Cardero produced portraits of tribal members and scenes of Tlingit daily life A glacier between Yakutat Bay and Icy Bay was subsequently named after Malaspina The botanist Luis Nee also accompanied the expedition during which he collected and described numerous new plants Knowing that Cook had previously surveyed the coast west of Prince William Sound and found no passage Malaspina ceased his search at that point and sailed to the Spanish outpost at Nootka Sound on Vancouver Island Malaspina s expedition spent a fortnight at Nootka Sound While at Nootka the expedition s scientists made a study of the Nuu chah nulth Nootka peoples The relationship between the Spanish and the Nootkas was at its lowest point when Malaspina arrived Malaspina and his crew were able greatly to improve the relationship which was one of their objectives and reasons for stopping in the first place Owing in part to Malaspina s ability to bequeath generous gifts from his well supplied ships about to return to Mexico the friendship between the Spanish and the Nootkas was strengthened The gaining of the Nootka chief Maquinna s trust was particularly significant as he was one of the most powerful chiefs of the region and had been very wary of the Spanish when Malaspina arrived His friendship strengthened the Spanish claim to Nootka Sound which was in question after the Nootka Crisis and resolved in the subsequent Nootka Conventions The Spanish government was eager for the Nootka to agree formally that the land upon which the Spanish outpost stood had been ceded freely and legally This desire had to do with Spain s negotiations with Britain than over Nootka Sound and the Pacific Northwest Malaspina was able to acquire exactly what the government wanted After weeks of negotiations the principal Nootka chief Maquinna agreed that the Spanish would always remain owners of the land they then occupied and that they had acquired it with all due propriety The outcome of the Nootka Convention depended in part on this pact 13 In addition to the expedition s work with the Nootkas astronomical observations were made to fix the location of Nootka Sound and calibrate the expedition s chronometers Nootka Sound was surveyed and mapped with an accuracy far greater than had previously been available Unexplored channels were investigated The maps were also linked to the baseline established by Captain Cook allowing calibration between Spanish and British charts Botanical studies were carried out including an attempt to make a type of beer out of spruce needles that was hoped to have anti scorbutic properties for combating scurvy The expedition ships took on water and wood and provided the Spanish outpost with many useful goods including medicines food various tools and utensils and a Reaumur scale thermometer 14 After departing Nootka Sound the two ships sailed south stopping at the Spanish settlement and mission at Monterey California before returning to Mexico In 1792 back in Mexico Malaspina dispatched two schooners or goletas to conduct more detailed explorations of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Strait of Georgia These were Sutil commanded by Dionisio Alcala Galiano and Mexicana under Cayetano Valdes y Flores 8 Both were officers subordinate to Malaspina The ships were to have been commanded by two pilots of San Blas Mexico but Malaspina arranged for his own officers to replace them In 1792 Malaspina s expedition sailed from Mexico across the Pacific Ocean They stopped briefly at Guam before arriving at the Philippines where they spent several months mostly at Manila During this period Malaspina sent Bustamante in the Atrevida to Macau China After Bustamante s return the expedition left the Philippines and sailed to New Zealand They explored Doubtful Sound at the southern end of New Zealand s South Island mapping and carrying out gravity experiments 15 Then Malaspina sailed to Port Jackson Sydney on the coast of New South Wales Australia which had been established by the British in 1788 16 During the expedition s stay at Sydney Cove New South Wales in March April 1793 Thaddaus Haenke carried out observations and made collections relating to the natural history of the place as he reported to the colony s patron Sir Joseph Banks saying I here express the public testimony of a grateful soul for the very extraordinary humanity and kindness with which the English in their new Colony welcomed us wandering vagabonds Ulysses companions A Nation renowned throughout the world which has left nothing untried will also overcome with the happiest omens by the most assiduous labour and by its own determined spirit the great obstacles opposing it in the foundation of what may one day become another Rome 17 During its visit to Port Jackson twelve drawings were done by members of the expedition which are a valuable record of the settlement in its early years especially as among them are the only depictions of the convict settlers from this period 18 The recently founded English colony had been included in the expedition s itinerary in response to a memorandum drawn up in September 1788 by one of Malaspina s fellow naval officers Francisco Munoz y San Clemente who warned of the dangers it posed to the Spanish possessions in the Pacific in peacetime from the development of a contraband commerce and in war time as a base for British naval operations Munoz said The colonists will be able to fit out lucrative privateers so as to cut all communication between the Philippines and both Americas These possessions will have a navy of their own obtaining from the Southern region whatever is necessary to establish it and when they have it ready formed they will be able to invade our nearby possessions 19 In the confidential report he wrote following his visit Malaspina echoed the warning from Munoz writing of the terrible future danger for Spain from the English colony at Port Jackson from whence with the greatest ease a crossing of two or three months through healthy climates and a secure navigation could bring to our defenceless coasts two or three thousand castaway bandits to serve interpolated with an excellent body of regular troops It would not be surprising that in this case the women also sharing the risks as well as the sensual pleasures of the men the history of the invasions of the Huns and Alans in the most fertile provinces of Europe would be revived in our surprised colonies The pen trembles to record the image however distant of such disorders While recognizing the strategic threat it posed to Spain s Pacific possessions in time of war Malaspina wrote It is not the concern of these paragraphs to demonstrate in detail the many schemes for these projected plunderings so much as the easiest ways of preventing them He preferred the peaceable approach of drawing attention to the commercial opportunity the new colony offered for a trade in food and livestock from Chile and the development of a viable trade route linking that country with the Philippines Having seen carts and even ploughs being drawn by convicts for want of draught animals in the colony and having eaten meals with the colonists at which beef and mutton were regarded as rare luxuries Malaspina saw the trade in Chilean livestock as the key to a profitable commerce He proposed that an agreement be signed with London for an Association of Traders and for an agent of the colony to be resident in Chile Conscious that the policy he was proposing was a bold and imaginative one in the face of Spain s traditional insistence on a national monopoly of trade and other relations within her empire Malaspina declared that this affair is exceedingly favourable to the commercial balance of our Colonies and it would have the advantage of calming and tranquilizing a lively turbulent and even insolent neighbour not with sacrifices on our part but rather with many and very considerable profits 20 Returning east across the Pacific Ocean the expedition spent a month at Vava u the northern archipelago of Tonga From there they sailed to Callao Peru then Talcahuanco Chile The fjords of southern Chile were carefully mapped before the expedition rounded Cape Horn Then they surveyed the Falkland Islands Spanish Islas Malvinas and the coast of Patagonia before stopping again at Montevideo From Montevideo Malaspina took a long route through the central Atlantic Ocean to Spain reaching Cadiz on September 21 1794 He had spent 62 months at sea 2 21 During the five years of this expedition Malaspina fixed the measurements of America s western coast with a precision never before achieved He measured the height of Mount Saint Elias in Alaska and explored gigantic glaciers including Malaspina Glacier later named after him He demonstrated the feasibility of a possible Panama Canal and outlined plans for its construction 22 In addition Malaspina s expedition was the first major long distance sea voyage that experienced virtually no scurvy Malaspina s medical officer Pedro Gonzalez was convinced that fresh oranges and lemons were essential for preventing scurvy Only one outbreak occurred during a 56 day trip across the open sea Five sailors came down with symptoms one seriously After three days at Guam all five were healthy again James Cook had made great progress against the disease but other British captains such as George Vancouver found his accomplishment difficult to replicate It had been known since the mid 18th century that citrus fruit was effective but for decades it was impractical to store fruit or fruit juice for long periods on ships without losing the necessary ascorbic acid Spain s large empire and many ports of call made it easier to acquire fresh fruit 23 Political controversy and exile edit nbsp Alessandro Malaspina by Jose Maria Galvan In December 1794 Malaspina met with King Charles IV and Prime Minister Manuel de Godoy At first all was well and Malaspina was promoted to fleet brigadier in March 1795 2 In September 1795 he sent his writings to the Spanish government but the latter judged their publication to be inopportune in the then existing political situation Disenchanted Malaspina led a philosophical literary polemic in the Madrid press on the meaning of beauty in nature 24 and at the same time took part in a secret conspiracy to overthrow Manuel Godoy 25 In his examination of the political situation in the Spanish colonies Malaspina had decided that Spain should free its colonies and form a confederation of states bound by international trade 8 In September 1795 he began trying to influence the Spanish government with such proposals Unfortunately Malaspina had lost the support he used to have at the royal court before his voyage and the political situation had changed radically due in part to the French Revolution He was accused by Prime Minister Godoy of being part of a conspiracy to overthrow him and arrested on November 23 on charges of plotting against the state 25 After an inconclusive trial on April 20 1796 Charles IV decreed that Malaspina be stripped of rank and imprisoned in the isolated fortress of San Anton in La Coruna Galicia Malaspina remained in the prison from 1796 to 1802 During his incarceration he wrote a variety of essays on topics such as aesthetics 26 economics and literary criticism 2 Francesco Melzi d Eril and later through him Napoleon campaigned for Malaspina s release He was finally freed at the end of 1802 but was exiled from Spain He left for his hometown of Mulazzo via the port of Genoa and settled in nearby Pontremoli Because of Spain s conflict with revolutionary France there were no funds in the naval budget for publishing his seven volume account of the 1789 94 expeditions it remained unpublished until the late 19th century apart from a Russian translation by Adam von Krusenstern in successive issues of the official journal of the Russian Admiralty between 1824 and 1827 27 A large portion of the documents meant to be used as source material for the publication of Malaspina s expedition remained scattered in archives to the present day A significant number of documents are lost and those that survive are often in a rough semi edited form Alexander von Humboldt an admirer of Malaspina wrote this able navigator is more famous for his misfortunes than for his discoveries 28 There was some contemporary publication but it took two hundred years for the bulk of the records of the expedition to be published The notes made by the expedition s botanist Luis Nee while he was at Port Jackson in 1793 were published in 1800 29 Dionisio Alcala Galiano s journal of his survey of the straits between Vancouver Island and the mainland carried out as part of the Malaspina expedition was published in 1802 with all mention of Malaspina s name excised 30 In 1809 Jose Espinosa y Tello published the astronomical and geodesic observations made during the expedition in a two volume work that also contained an abbreviated narrative of the voyage 31 This narrative was translated into Russian and published by Admiral Adam von Krusenstern in St Petersburg in 1815 32 The journal of Malaspina s voyage was first published in Russian translation by Krusenstern in successive issues of the official journal of the Russian Admiralty between 1824 and 1827 a copy of the manuscript had been obtained by the Russian ambassador in Madrid in 1806 33 The journal of Francisco Xavier de Viana second in command of the Atrevida was published in Montevideo in 1849 34 Bustamante s journal was published in 1868 in the official journal of the Directorate of Hydrography 35 An abbreviated account of the Malaspina expedition consisting mostly of his journal Diario de Viaje was published in Madrid in 1885 by Pedro de Novo y Colson 36 Malaspina s journal was published in another edition in Madrid in 1984 37 The definitive version of the expedition was finally published in Spain by the Museo Naval and Ministerio de Defensa in nine volumes from 1987 to 1999 38 The second volume of this series Malaspina s journal was published in an annotated English translation by the Hakluyt Society in association with the Museo Naval between 2001 and 2005 39 The drawings and paintings done by members of the expedition were described by Carmen Sotos Serrano in 1982 40 The 4 000 odd manuscripts relating to the expedition were catalogued by Maria Dolores Higueras Rodriguez between 1989 and 1994 41 Later life editIn Pontremoli which by then was part of the short lived Kingdom of Etruria Malaspina concerned himself with local politics In December 1803 he organized a quarantine between the Napoleonic Italian Republic and the Kingdom of Etruria during a yellow fever epidemic in Livorno In 1805 he received the title of Advising Auditor of the Council of State of the Kingdom of Italy The Queen of Etruria received him at court in December 1806 Shortly afterwards he was admitted to the Columban Society in Florence with the title of Addomesticato 2 The first appearance of an incurable illness occurred in 1807 2 Alessandro Malaspina died in Pontremoli on April 9 1810 at the age of 55 8 His death was noted in the Gazzetta di Genova 18 April 1810 Pontremoli 9 April 1810 Today at 10 o clock in the evening the learned and famous navigator Signore Alexandro Malaspina of Mulazzo passed from this life Such a loss cannot fail to be felt far and wide by all those who placing high value on the importance of the nautical and travel accounts of this most talented Italian have known his equanimity in both good and bad fortune it is without doubt most bitter for those who witnessed the end from close by and who moreover had to admire his fortitude in suffering patiently to the very last the most severe pains of a long intestinal illness 42 Legacy editMalaspina University College and Malaspina International High School in the Canadian city of Nanaimo British Columbia took their names indirectly from the explorer although these names have been recently changed to Vancouver Island University and the High School at VIU by way of Malaspina Strait between Texada Island and the mainland and the Malaspina Peninsula and adjoining Malaspina Inlet nearby which are the location of Malaspina Provincial Park and are part of the Sunshine Coast region Vancouver Island University is home to the Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre There is also a Malaspina Peak and Malaspina Lake near Nootka Sound on Vancouver Island just southeast of the town of Gold River and the well known Malaspina Glacier in southern Alaska In New Zealand Malaspina Reach of Doubtful Sound in Fiordland explored by him in 1793 has his name 43 See also editEuropean and American voyages of scientific exploration Jose de Moraleda y Montero Spanish Navy explorer contemporary with MalaspinaNotes and references edit Kendrick John 2003 Alejandro Malaspina Portrait of a Visionary McGill Queen s Press p xi ISBN 0 7735 2652 8 online at Google Books Malaspina usually spelt his name Alexandro a form which as well as being standard orthography in his day would have had the advantage for him of being pronounceable in both Italian and Spanish On occasion he also used the forms Alessandro or Alejandro When he wrote in English he signed himself Alexander and when writing in French Alexandre this was in accord with the convention of the day where names were translated into the language being used He used the variant spellings according to the language in which he was writing Changes in Spanish orthography made since his time by the Real Academia Espanola have made Alejandro the standard form in Spanish and likewise the orthographic rules of the Accademia della Repubblica Italiana make the modern standard Italian form Alessandro for writers in English Alexandro has the convenience of obviating the need to choose between the exclusively Italian and Spanish versions of his name a b c d e f g h i j k John Black amp Dario Manfredi A Biography of Alexandro Malaspina Malaspina University College Archived from the original on 29 January 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 05 Kendrick John 2003 Alejandro Malaspina Portrait of a Visionary McGill Queen s Press p 27 ISBN 9780773526525 Dario Manfredi Il Viaggio Attorno al Mondo di Malaspina con la Fregata di S M C Astrea 1786 1788 Memorie della Accademia Lunigianese di Scienze La Spezia 1988 Archivo Historico Nacional Madrid Estado legajo 4289 Also at Archivo Nacional de Chile Fondo Vicuna Mackenna vol 304 D ff 5 26 Published in Revista chilena de historia y geografia no 107 1946 pp 387 401 Noticia de las principales expediciones hechas por nuestras pilotos del Departamiento de San Blas al reconocimiento de la costa noroeste de America desde el ano de 1774 hasta el 1791 extractada de los diarios originales de aquellos navegantes Novo y Colson Viaje p 428 cited in Warren L Cook Flood Tide of Empire New Haven and London Yale University Press 1973 p 115 and in Robert J King Ambrose Higgins and the Malaspina Expedition presented at the International Conference of the Association of Iberian and Latin American Studies of Australasia AILASA 99 La Trobe University Melbourne July 1999 At Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre Archived from the original on 2010 08 19 Retrieved 2010 02 11 Pedro Normande to Floridablanca St Petersburg 16 February 1787 Archivo Historico Nacional Madrid Estado legajo 4289 copy held at Library of Congress Manuscripts Division Foreign Copying Project Reproductions quoted in Anthony H Hull Spanish and Russian Rivalry in the North Pacific Regions of the New World University of Alabama PhD thesis UMI microfilm pp 113 7 and in Warren L Cook Flood Tide of Empire Spain and the Pacific Northwest 1543 1819 New Haven Yale University Press 1973 p 116 a b c d e Captain Alexandro Malaspina Malaspina University College Archived from the original on 2008 09 04 Retrieved 2008 02 05 Cutter Donald C 1991 Malaspina amp Galiano Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast 1791 amp 1792 University of Washington Press p 3 ISBN 0 295 97105 3 Cutter Donald C 1991 Malaspina amp Galiano Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast 1791 amp 1792 University of Washington Press pp 4 5 ISBN 0 295 97105 3 Fernandez Armesto Felipe 2006 Pathfinders A Global History of Exploration W W Norton amp Company pp 305 307 ISBN 0 393 06259 7 Kendrick John 2003 Alejandro Malaspina Portrait of a Visionary McGill Queen s Press p 52 ISBN 0 7735 2652 8 online at Google Books Cutter Donald C 1991 Malaspina amp Galiano Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast 1791 amp 1792 University of Washington Press pp 105 109 ISBN 0 295 97105 3 Cutter Donald C 1991 Malaspina amp Galiano Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast 1791 amp 1792 University of Washington Press pp 75 76 108 109 ISBN 0 295 97105 3 Robert J King Puerto del Pendulo Doubtful Sound The Malaspina Expedition s Visit to New Zealand in Quest of the True Figure of the Earth The Globe no 65 2010 pp 1 18 Downloadable at http search informit com au Robert J King The Secret History of the Convict Colony Alexandro Malaspina s report on the British settlement of New South Wales Sydney Allen amp Unwin Australia 1990 ISBN 0 04 610020 2 Robert J King and Victoria Ibanez A Letter from Thaddaeus Haenke to Sir Joseph Banks Sydney Cove 15 April 1793 Archives of Natural History vol 23 no 2 1996 pp 255 259 Robert Langdon They Came to Spy on Sydney The Sydney Morning Herald 7 April 1962 Carmen Sotos Serrano Nuevas obras de Fernando Brambila en Londres Homenaje al Profesor Hernandez Perera Madrid Universidad Complutense de Madrid 1992 pp 453 8 Peter Barber Malaspina and George III Brambila and Watling Three discovered drawings of Sydney and Parramatta by Fernando Brambila Australian Journal of Art Vol XI 1993 pp 31 55 Robert J King Francisco Munoz y San Clemente and his Reflexions on the English Settlements of New Holland British Library Journal vol 25 no 1 1999 pp 55 76 Robert J King Science and Spycraft The Malaspina Expedition in New Zealand and New South Wales 1793 Mains l Haul A Journal of Pacific Maritime History vols 41 no 4 amp 42 no 1 Fall Winter 2006 pp 76 87 Also at Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre Archived from the original on 2010 08 19 Retrieved 2010 02 11 Lorenzo Sanfeliu Ortiz 62 Meses A Bordo La expedicion Malaspina segun el diario del Teniente de Navio Don Antonio de Tova Arredondo 2 o Comandante de la Atrevida 1789 1794 Madrid Biblioteca de Camarote Revista General de Marina 1943 y Editorial Naval 1988 Caso Adolph Marion E Welsh 1978 They Too Made America Great Branden Books p 72 ISBN 0 8283 1714 3 online at Internet Archive Fernandez Armesto Felipe 2006 Pathfinders A Global History of Exploration W W Norton amp Company pp 297 298 ISBN 0 393 06259 7 Sanchez Arteaga Juanma 2022 Lo bello en la naturaleza Alejandro Malaspina estetica filosofia natural y blancura en el ocaso de la Ilustracion 1795 1803 Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas ISBN 978 84 00 11002 4 a b Sanchez Arteaga Juanma 2021 De las tertulias a la conspiracion la disputa por la belleza y las amistades peligrosas de Alejandro Malaspina en Madrid Asclepio Revista de historia de la medicina y de la ciencia 73 2 570 583 doi 10 3989 asclepio 2021 28 S2CID 244096152 Black John 2011 Malaspina s Meditation on Beauty in Nature 18 pg doi 10 25316 IR 2741 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Pedro de Novo y Colson Viaje politico cientifico alrededor del mundo por las corbetas Descubierta y Atrevida al mando de los capitanes de navio don Alejandro Malaspina y don Jose de Bustamante y Guerra desde 1789 a 1794 Madrid 1885 Mª Dolores Higueras Rodriguez Diario General del Viaje Corbeta Atrevida por Jose Bustamante y Guerra Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo IX Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1999 p 48 Puteshestvie v Yuzhno more k Zapadnim beregam Ameriki i ostrovam Marianskim i Fnlipinskim sovershennoe pod komandoyu Karolevsko Ispanskogo Flota Kapitanov Malespini i Bustamante Voyage to the South Sea West coast of America and the Mariana and Philippine islands under the overall command of Spanish Royal Navy Captains Malaspina and Bustamante Zapiski izdavaemyya Gosudarstvennym Admiraltejskim Departmentom otnosyashiyasya k Moreplavaniyu Naukam i Slovesnosti Zapiski izdavayemiya Gosudarstvennim Admiralteiskim Departmentom otnosyashchiyasya k Moryeplavaniyu Naukam i Slovesnosti Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation Science and Literature VI 1824 pp 188 276 VII 1824 pp 121 223 VIII 1825 pp 176 272 IX 1825 pp 1 292 XII 1827 pp 29 191 29 191 XIII 1827 pp 10 178 Vaughan Thomas E A P Crownhart Vaughan Mercedes Palau de Iglesias 1977 Voyages of Enlightenment Malaspina on the Northwest Coast Oregon Historical Society p 16 Antonio Joseph Cavanilles Observaciones sobre el suelo naturales y plantas de Puerto Jackson y Bahia Botanica Anales de Historia Natural No 3 1800 translated into German by Christian Augustus Fischer Die Spanier in Neu Sud Wallis Spanische Miszellen Berlin 1803 and Dresden 1804 pp 3 25 and by Fischer into French Visite des Espagnols a la Nouvelle Galles Meridionale Fragment d un Voyage inedit de Malaspina Annales des Voyages de la Geographie et de l Histoire Paris Tome IX X 1809 pp 340 355 Dionisio Alcala Galiano Relacion del Viage hecho por las Goletas Sutil y Mexicana en el ano 1792 para reconocer el Estrecho de Juan de Fuca Madrid 1802 Josef Espinosa y Tello Memorias sobre las Obervaciones Astronomicas hechas por los Navegantes Espanoles en Distintos Lugares del Globo Madrid Imprenta Real Tomos I amp II 1809 Izvѣstie o Ispanskoj Ekspedicii Predprinyatoj ldya Otkytii v 1791 1792 i 1793 godah pod komandoyu Kapitana Malespine Zapiski izdavaemyya Gosudarstvennym Admiraltejskim Departmentom otnosyashiyasya k Moreplavaniyu Naukam i Slovesnosti News on the Spanish Discovery Expedition of 1791 1792 and 1793 commanded by Captain Malespina Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation Science and Literature II 1815 pp 256 260 During his own voyage to the North Pacific of 1803 to 1806 Krusenstern surveyed the west coast of Japan in May 1805 and on his resulting chart made the generous gesture of naming a prominent cape on the coast of Hokkaido after the unfortunate Spanish navigator Malespina sic A J von Krusenstern Voyage round the World translated by Richard Belgrave Hoppner London John Murray 1813 Vol II p 38 This cape already bore the Japanese name Tampake Misaki now Ofuyu Misaki the northern point of Ishikari Bay and Krusenstern s Cape Malespina failed to replace the Japanese name on the charts Puteshestvie v Yuzhno more k Zapadnim beregam Ameriki i ostrovam Marianskim i Fnlipinskim sovershennoe pod komandoyu Karolevsko Ispanskogo Flota Kapitanov Malespini i Bustamante Voyage to the South Sea West coast of America and the Mariana and Philippine islands under the overall command of Spanish Royal Navy Captains Malaspina and Bustamante Zapiski izdavaemyya Gosudarstvennym Admiraltejskim Departmentom otnosyashiyasya k Moreplavaniyu Naukam i Slovesnosti Zapiski izdavayemiya Gosudarstvennim Admiralteiskim Departmentom otnosyashchiyasya k Moryeplavaniyu Naukam i Slovesnosti Notices issued by the State Admiralty Department relating to Navigation Science and Literature VI 1824 pp 188 276 VII 1824 pp 121 223 VIII 1825 pp 176 272 IX 1825 pp 1 292 XII 1827 pp 29 191 Zapiski XII XIII 1827 pp 10 178 Zapiski XIII Dario Manfredi Sulla Prima Edizione del Viaggio di Malaspina S Pietroburgo 1824 1827 Giovanni Caboto e le Vie dell Atlantico settentrionale Genova Centro italiano per gli Studi storico geografici 1999 pp 485 159 Francisco Xavier de Viana Diario del viage explorador de las corbetas expanolas Descubierta y Atrevida Montevideo Cerrito de la Victoria 1849 J Bustamante y Guerra Relacion Anuario de la Dirreccion de Hidrografia Madrid vol VI 1868 pp 240 364 Museo Naval MS 753 Pedro de Novo y Colson ed Viaje politico cientifico alrededor del mundo por las corbetas Descubierta y Atrevida al mando de los capitanes de navio don Alejandro Malaspina y don Jose de Bustamante y Guerra desde 1789 a 1794 Madrid 1885 The section of this work relating to the visit to Dusky Sound was published in Robert McNab Murihiku and the Southern Islands Invercargill William South 1907 pp 49 56 and in Historical Records of New Zealand 1908 Vol I pp 417 29 Mercedes Palau Aranzazu Zabala and Blanca Saiz eds Viaje politico y cientifico a la America Meridional a las costas del mar Pacifico y a las Islas Marianas y Filipinas Ediciones El Museo Universal Madrid 1984 Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Barcelona Lunwerg tomos 1 9 1987 1999 The Malaspina Expedition 1789 1794 the Journal of the Voyage by Alejandro Malaspina Andrew David Felipe Fernandez Armesto Carlos Novi and Glyndwr Williams eds translated by Sylvia Jamieson London and Madrid Hakluyt Society in association with the Museo Naval 3rd series no 8 Volume I 2001 no 11 Volume II 2003 and no 13 Volume III 2005 Carmen Sotos Serrano Los Pintores de la Expedicion de Alejandro Malaspina Madrid Real Academia de la Historia 1982 Mª Dolores Higueras Rodriguez Catalogo critico de los documentos de la Expedicion Malaspina en el Museo Naval three volumes Madrid Museo Naval 1989 1994 See also Gazzetta Universale No 33 24 Aprile 1810 pag 2 Archived from the original on 2014 09 12 Retrieved 2014 09 12 Robert J King Puerto del Pendulo Doubtful Sound The Malaspina Expedition s Visit to New Zealand in Quest of the True Figure of the Earth The Globe no 65 2010 pp 1 18 1 Bibliography edit English Iris H W Engstrand Spanish Scientists in the New World The Eighteenth Century Expeditions Seattle Univ Washington Press 1981 Edith C Galbraith Malaspina s Voyage around the World California Historical Society Quarterly vol 3 no 3 October 1924 pp 215 37 Robin Inglis ed Spain and the North Pacific Coast Vancouver Maritime Museum Society 1992 Robin Inglis Successors and rivals to Cook the French and the Spaniards in Glyndwr Williams ed Captain Cook Explorations and Assessments Woodbridge The Boydell Press 2004 pp 161 178 Non English Juanma Sanchez Arteaga 2022 Lo bello en la naturaleza Alejandro Malaspina estetica filosofia natural y blancura en el ocaso de la Ilustracion 1795 1803 Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas ISBN 978 84 00 11002 4 Mariana Cuesta Domingo Espinosa y Tello y su viaje complementario al de Malaspina in Paz Martin Ferrero ed Actas del simposium CCL aniversario nacimiento de Joseph Celestino Mutis Cadiz Diputacion Provincial de Cadiz 1986 pp 197 204 Mª Dolores Higueras Rodriguez Diario General del Viaje Corbeta Atrevida por Jose Bustamante y Guerra Museo Naval Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo IX Madrid y Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1999 Victoria Ibanez Trabajos Cientificos y Correspondencia de Tadeo Haenke Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo IV Madrid y Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1992 Dario Manfredi Adam J Krusenstern y la primera edicion del viaje de Malaspina San Petersburgo 1824 1827 Derroteros de la Mar del Sur Lima Ano 8 num 8 2000 pp 65 82 Dario Manfredi Italiano in Spagna Spagnolo in Italia Alessandro Malaspina 1754 1810 e la piu importante spedizione scientifica marittima del Secolo dei Luni Torino Nuova Eri Edizioni Rai 1992 Dario Manfredi Sulla Prima Edizione del Viaggio di Malaspina S Pietroburgo 1824 1827 Giovanni Caboto e le Vie dell Atlantico settentrionale Atti del Convegno Internazionale de Studi Roma 29 settembre 1 ottobre 1997 Genova Brigati Centro italiano per gli Studi storico geografici 1999 pp 485 159 Dario Manfredi Alessandro Malaspina e Fabio Ala Ponzone Lettere dal Vecchio e Nuovo Mondo 1788 1803 Bologna il Mulino 1999 Dario Manfredi Sugli Studi e sulle Navigazioni minori di Alessandro Malaspina Cronaca e Storia di Val di Magra XVI XVII 1987 1988 p 159 Dario Manfredi Il Viaggio Attorno al Mondo di Malaspina con la Fregata di S M C Astrea 1786 1788 La Spezia Memorie della Accademia Lunigianese di Scienze 1988 Luis Rafael Martinez Canavate Trabajos Astronomicos Geodesicos e Hidrograficos Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo VI Madrid y Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1994 Felix Munoz Garmendia Diario y Trabajos Botanicos de Luis Nee Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo III Madrid y Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1992 Antonio Orozco Acuaviva ed La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Bicentenario de la Salida de Cadiz Cadiz Real Academia Hispano Americana 1989 In the contribution to this work by Pablo Anton Sole Los Padrones de Cumplimiento Pascual de la Expedicion Malaspina 1790 1794 pp 173 238 the names of all of the 450 personnel who took part in the several stages of the expedition are listed Antonio Orozco Acuaviva et al eds Malaspina y Bustamante 94 II Jornadas Internacionales Conmemorativas del regreso de la Expedicion a Cadiz 1794 1994 Madrid Rustica 1996 Mercedes Palau Baquero amp Antonio Orozco Acuaviva eds Malaspina 92 I Jornadas Internacionales Madrid Cadiz La Coruna 17 25 de Septiembre de 1992 Cadiz Real Academia Hispano Americana 1994 Juan Pimentel Igea Examines Politicos Museo Naval y Ministerio de Defensa La Expedicion Malaspina 1789 1794 Tomo VII Barcelona Lunwerg Editores 1996 Blanca Saiz Bibliografia sobre Alejandro Malaspina y acerca de la expedicion Malaspina y de los marinos y cientificos que en ella participaron Ediciones El Museo Universal Madrid 1992 Blanca Saiz ed Malaspina 93 Alessandro Malaspina e la sua spedizione scientifica 1789 1794 Atti del Congresso Internazionale nel bicentenario della massima impresa di Alessandro Malaspina tenutosi a Mulazzo Castiglione del Terziere e Lerici dal 24 al 26 settembre 1993 Mulazzo Centro di Studi Malaspiniani 1995 Emilio Soler Pascual La Conspiracion Malaspina 1795 1796 Alicante Instituto de Cultural Juan Gil Albert 1965 Diputacion Provincial Col Ensayo y Investigacion 32 Emilio Soler Pascual y Asociacion Cultural Dionisio Alcala Galiano Trafalgar y Alcala Galiano jornadas internacionales Cabra 17 al 23 de octubre de 2005 Madrid Agencia Espanola de Cooperacion Internacional 2006 Series Ciencias y humanismo Carlo Ferrari Dario Manfredi Dallo Zibaldone Ferrari nuovi elementi sulle letture di Alessandro Malaspina 1796 1810 Estratto dall Archivio Storico per le Province Parmensi Quarta serie vol XL Anno 1988 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alessandro Malaspina of Mulazzo Biography by Dario Mandfredi Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Alexandro Malaspina Research Centre Vancouver Island University https web viu ca black amrc index htm Archive url https archive it org collections 11555 Circumnavigation expedition Malaspina Global change and exploration of the ocean s biodiversity 2 Alessandro Malaspina Polymath Virtual Library Fundacion Ignacio Larramendi Portals nbsp Italy nbsp History nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alejandro Malaspina amp oldid 1219201283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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