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Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux

Antoine Raymond Joseph de Bruni, chevalier d'Entrecasteaux (French pronunciation: [ɑ̃twan ʁɛmɔ̃ ʒɔzɛf bʁyni dɑ̃tʁəkasto]) (8 November 1737 – 21 July 1793) was a French naval officer, explorer and colonial governor. He is perhaps best known for his exploration of the Australian coast in 1792, while searching for the La Pérouse expedition.[1] Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux is commonly referred to simply as Bruni d'Entrecasteaux or Bruny d'Entrecasteaux, each of which is a compound surname (derived from his father's surname, Bruni or Bruny, and the family's origins in Entrecasteaux).

Chevalier

Antoine Raymond Joseph de Bruni d'Entrecasteaux
Portrait in Voyage to Australia and the Pacific 1791–1793
Born(1737-11-08)8 November 1737
Died21 July 1793(1793-07-21) (aged 55)
off the Hermits
Cause of deathScurvy
NationalityFrench
Years active1754–1793

Early career edit

 
Bruni d'Entrecasteaux

Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was born to Dorothée de Lestang-Parade and Jean Baptiste Bruny, at Aix-en-Provence in 1739. His father was a member of the Parlement of Provence. Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was educated at a Jesuit school and reportedly intended to become a priest in the Society of Jesus, but his father intervened and enlisted him in the French Navy in 1754. In the action that secured the Balearic Islands for Spain (and resulted in the execution of Admiral Byng), Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was a midshipman aboard the 26-gun Minerve, and in April 1757 he was commissioned as an ensign. His further naval career as a junior officer was uneventful, and he appears in this period to have done general service in the French Navy.

For a time Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was Assistant Director of ports and arsenals, after which (1785) he was transferred to command a French Squadron in the East Indies, comprising Résolution and Subtile.[2] During this service he opened up a new route to Canton by way of the Sunda Strait and the Moluccas, for use during the south-east monsoon season. In 1787 he was appointed Governor of the French colony of Isle de France (now Mauritius) and the Isle of Bourbon.[1]

His explorations edit

 
The frigates Recherche and Espérance

In September 1791, the French Assembly decided to send an expedition in search of Jean-François de La Pérouse, who had not been heard of since leaving Botany Bay in March 1788. Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was selected to command this expedition. He was given a frigate, Recherche (500 tons), with Lieutenant Jean-Louis d'Hesmity-d'Auribeau as his second-in-command and Élisabeth Rossel among the other officers. A similar ship, Espérance, was placed under Jean-Michel Huon de Kermadec,[1] with de Trobriand as his second-in-command. A distinguished hydrographical engineer, Beautemps-Beaupré, served as the hydrographer of the expedition.

When the expedition left Brest on 28 September 1791, Entrecasteaux was promoted to the rank of rear-admiral. The plan of the voyage was to proceed to New Holland (Australia), to sight Cape Leeuwin at its southwest extremity, then to hug the shore closely all the way to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), inspecting every possible harbour in a rowing boat, and then to sail for Tonga (aka "the Friendly Islands") via the northern cape of New Zealand allowing gardener Félix Delahaye to collect live breadfruit plants for transport to the French West Indies. D'Entrecasteaux was next to follow La Pérouse's intended route in the Pacific. It was thought that La Pérouse had meant to explore New Caledonia and the Louisiade Archipelago, to pass through Torres Strait, and to explore the Gulf of Carpentaria and the northern coast of New Holland.

However, when Bruni d'Entrecasteaux reached Table Bay, Cape Town on 17 January 1792, he heard a report that Captain John Hunter (later to be Governor of New South Wales) had recently seen – off the Admiralty Islands – canoes manned by indigenous people wearing French uniforms and belts. Although Hunter denied this report, and although the Frenchmen heard of the denial, Bruni d'Entrecasteaux determined to make directly to the Admiralty Islands, nowadays part of Papua New Guinea, taking water and refreshing his crew at Van Diemen's Land. On 20 April 1792, that land was in sight, and three days later the ships anchored in a harbour, which he named Recherche Bay. For the next five weeks, until 28 May 1792, the Frenchmen carried out careful boat explorations which revealed in detail the beautiful waterways and estuaries in the area.

Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was fortunate in having good officers and scientists, most importantly from the exploration point-of-view the expedition's first hydrographical engineer, C.F Beautemps-Beaupré, who is now regarded as the father of modern French hydrography. The work this officer did in the field was excellent, and his charts, when published in France as an Atlas du Voyage de Bruny-Dentrecasteaux (1807) were very detailed. The atlas contains 39 charts, of which those of Van Diemen's Land were the most detailed; they remained the source of the English charts of the area for many years.

Beautemps-Beaupré, while surveying the coasts with Lieutenant Crétin, discovered that Adventure Bay, Tasmania, which had been discovered by Tobias Furneaux and named after his ship in 1773, was on an island which was separated from the mainland by a fine navigable channel. On 16 May, d'Entrecasteaux commenced to sail the ships through the channel, and this was accomplished by the 28th. Port Esperance, the Huon River, and other features were discovered, named, and charted, the admiral's names being given to the channel (D'Entrecasteaux Channel) and the large island (Bruny Island) separated by it from the mainland.

On 28 May 1792 the ships sailed into the Pacific to search for La Pérouse. On 17 June they arrived off the Isle of Pines, south of New Caledonia. From there, d'Entrecasteaux sailed northward along the western coast of New Caledonia. (The Bruni d'Entrecasteaux reefs at the northwestern end of the New Caledonia Barrier Reef are named for him.) He then passed the Solomon Islands along their southern or western coasts, sailed through Saint George's Channel between New Ireland and New Britain, and on 28 July sighted the south-east coast of the Admiralty Islands. After three days spent in scrutinizing the eastern and northern coastline, Bruni d'Entrecasteaux decided that the rumours he had heard in Table Bay must be false, and he therefore set sail for Ambon, in modern-day Indonesia, where his ships replenished their stores.

Leaving Amboina on 14 October, Bruni d'Entrecasteaux made for Cape Leeuwin, the south-western extremity of Australia, to carry out his original instructions of searching southern New Holland for La Pérouse. On 6 December land was sighted near Cape Leeuwin, and named D'Entrecasteaux Point. This event was celebrated by feastings and parties, one result of which was that the smith on board Recherche, Jean-Marie Marhadour over-indulged and died next day from an apoplectic fit. The weather proved boisterous, and the ships failed to find King George Sound, originally discovered by Vancouver. As they sailed further east, they penetrated numerous islands and dangerous shoals, to which they gave the name D'Entrecasteaux Islands – later changed to the Recherche Archipelago.

While the Frenchmen were still in that dangerous area, on 12 December a violent storm descended upon them, and both ships were nearly wrecked. Fortunately, however, they found an anchorage where they were able to ride out the worst of the gale. Landings took place here on the mainland, and the locality was named in honour of Legrand, who had spotted the anchorage, and of the ship he was on, Espérance. Beautemps-Beaupré made a hasty survey of the off-lying islands of the archipelago. No water was found, and on 18 December the ships continued eastward to the head of the Great Australian Bight, but here the coast was found to be even more arid, and the water position more serious.

On 4 January 1793, Bruni d'Entrecasteaux was forced to leave the coast at a position near Bruni d'Entrecasteaux Reef and sail direct to Van Diemen's Land. In this decision the French explorer was unfortunate, for if he had continued his examination of the southern coast of New Holland, he would have made all the geographical discoveries that fell to the lot of Bass and Flinders a few years later. Then, indeed, a French "Terre Napoléon" might well have become a fact.[citation needed]

The ships anchored in Recherche Bay on 22 January, and the expedition spent a period of five weeks in that area, watering the ships, refreshing the crews, and carrying out explorations into both natural history and geography. Beautemps-Beaupré, in company with other officers, surveyed the northern extensions to Storm Bay – the western extension was found to be a mouth of a river which received the name Rivière du Nord – it was renamed the Derwent River a few months later by the next visitor to this area, Captain John Hayes in Duke of Clarence and Duchess.

It was probably no coincidence that the d'Entrecasteaux expedition should have spent time investigating that part of Van Diemen's Land, as that region had been recommended for colonization by Henri Peyroux de la Coudrenière in his c.1784–85 "Mémoire sur les avantages qui résulteraient d'une colonie puissante à la terre de Diémen".[3] Although Peyroux’s proposal fell on deaf ears at the time, it may have influenced d'Entrecasteaux's choice of the location to investigate. An inset map of Frederick Henry Bay, the place recommended by Peyroux for a settlement, was included in the map of Van Diemens Land prepared by C. F. Beautemps-Beaupré, the hydrographer with the d'Entrecasteaux expedition.[4]

On 28 February d'Entrecasteaux sailed from Van Diemen's Land towards Tonga, sighting New Zealand and the Kermadec Islands en route. At Tonga, he found that the local people remembered Cook and Bligh well enough, but knew nothing of La Pérouse. He then sailed back to New Caledonia, where he anchored at Balade. The vain search for La Pérouse then resumed with Santa Cruz, then along the southern coasts of the Solomon Islands, the northern parts of the Louisiade Archipelago, through the Dampier Strait, along the northern coast of New Britain and the southern coast of the Admiralty Islands, and thence north of New Guinea to the Moluccas.

By this time, the affairs of the expedition had become almost desperate, largely because the officers were ardent royalists and the crews equally ardent revolutionaries. Kermadec had died of tuberculosis in Balade harbour, and on 21 July 1793, d'Entrecasteaux himself died of scurvy,[1] off the Hermit Islands, part of the Bismarck Archipelago in Papua New Guinea.

Commands were re-arranged, with Auribeau taking charge of the expedition, with Rossel in Kermadec's place. The new chief took the ships to Surabaya in east Java. Here it was learned that a republic had been proclaimed in France, and on 18 February 1794 Auribeau handed his vessels to the Dutch authorities so that the new French Government could not profit by them. Auribeau died a month later and Rossel sailed from Java in January 1795 on board a Dutch ship, arriving at Table Bay in April 1795. There his ship sailed unexpectedly with the expedition's papers, leaving him behind, but this vessel was captured by the British. Rossel then took passage on a brig-of-war, but this too was captured by the British. After the Peace of Amiens in 1802, all the papers of the expedition were returned to Rossel, who was thus enabled to publish a narrative of the whole enterprise.

Australian places named after him edit

Eponyms edit

D'Entrecasteaux is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of lizard endemic to Australia, Pseudemoia entrecasteauxii.[6]

See also edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Entrecasteaux, Joseph-Antoine Bruni d'. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 660.
  2. ^ Roche, p.386
  3. ^ Paul Roussier, "Un projet de colonie française dans le Pacifique à la fin du XVIII siecle," La Revue du Pacifique, Année 6, No.1, 15 Janvier 1927, pp.726-733.[1]; Robert J. King, "Henri Peyroux de la Coudrenière and his plan for a colony in Van Diemen's Land", Map Matters, Issue 31, June 2017, pp.2-6.[2] 13 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ C.F. Beautemps-Beaupré et al., Carte générale de la partie méridionale de la Nouvelle Hollande, appelée Terre d'Anthony Van Diemen, comprenant les découvertes faites dans cette partie par le contre-amiral Bruny-Dentrecasteaux levée et dressée par C. F. Beautemps-Beaupré, ingénieur hydrographe, en 1792 et 1793 (an 1er de l'ére Francaise), 1807. <http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-230810451>
  5. ^ . Geoscience Australia. Australian Government. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
  6. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Entrecasteaux", p. 84).

References edit

  • Douglas, Bronwen, Fanny Wonu Veys & Billie Lythberg (eds). Collecting in the South Seas; The Voyage of Bruni d"Entrecasteaux 1791–1794. Leiden: Sidestone Press, 2018
  • Duyker, Edward and Maryse (editors and translators) (2001). Bruny d’Entrecasteaux: Voyage to Australia and the Pacific 1791—1793. Melbourne: Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press. xliii + 392 pp. ISBN 0-522-84932-6 [paperback edition, March 2006, ISBN 0-522-85232-7].
  • Duyker, Edward (2003). Citizen Labillardière: A Naturalist’s Life in Revolution and Exploration (1755—1834). Melbourne: Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-85010-3, Paperback reprint, 2004, ISBN 0-522-85160-6, pp. 383 [Winner, New South Wales Premier's General History Prize, 2004].
  • Horner FB (1995). Looking for La Perouse: D’Entrecasteaux in Australia and the South Pacific, 1792–1793. Carlton South, Victoria: Miegunyah Press. ISBN 0-522-84451-0.
  • Marchant, Leslie R. (1966). "Bruny D'Entrecasteaux, Joseph-Antoine Raymond (1739–1793)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  • McLaren, Ian F. (1993). La Perouse in the Pacific, including searches by d’Entrecasteaux, Dillon, Dumont d’Urville : an annotated bibliography. (with an introduction by John Dunmore). Parkville, [Victoria]: University of Melbourne Library. ISBN 0-7325-0601-8.
  • Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours, 1671 - 1870. Group Retozel-Maury Millau. pp. 325–6. ISBN 978-2-9525917-0-6. OCLC 165892922.
  • Van Duuren, David; Mostert, Tristan (2007). Curiosities from the Pacific Ocean. A remarkable Rediscovery in the Tropenmuseum, Amsterdam: Thirteen Ethnographic Objects from the Bruny d'Entrecasteaux Expedition (1791–1794). Amsterdam: Tropenmuseum / Leiden: C. Zwartenkot. ISBN 0-522-84932-6.

External links

    antoine, bruni, entrecasteaux, entrecasteaux, redirects, here, ships, this, name, french, ship, entrecasteaux, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mat. D Entrecasteaux redirects here For ships of this name see French ship D Entrecasteaux This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Antoine Raymond Joseph de Bruni chevalier d Entrecasteaux French pronunciation ɑ twan ʁɛmɔ ʒɔzɛf de bʁyni dɑ tʁekasto 8 November 1737 21 July 1793 was a French naval officer explorer and colonial governor He is perhaps best known for his exploration of the Australian coast in 1792 while searching for the La Perouse expedition 1 Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux is commonly referred to simply as Bruni d Entrecasteaux or Bruny d Entrecasteaux each of which is a compound surname derived from his father s surname Bruni or Bruny and the family s origins in Entrecasteaux ChevalierAntoine Raymond Joseph de Bruni d EntrecasteauxPortrait in Voyage to Australia and the Pacific 1791 1793Born 1737 11 08 8 November 1737Aix en ProvenceDied21 July 1793 1793 07 21 aged 55 off the HermitsCause of deathScurvyNationalityFrenchYears active1754 1793 Contents 1 Early career 2 His explorations 3 Australian places named after him 4 Eponyms 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 ReferencesEarly career edit nbsp Bruni d EntrecasteauxBruni d Entrecasteaux was born to Dorothee de Lestang Parade and Jean Baptiste Bruny at Aix en Provence in 1739 His father was a member of the Parlement of Provence Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux was educated at a Jesuit school and reportedly intended to become a priest in the Society of Jesus but his father intervened and enlisted him in the French Navy in 1754 In the action that secured the Balearic Islands for Spain and resulted in the execution of Admiral Byng Bruni d Entrecasteaux was a midshipman aboard the 26 gun Minerve and in April 1757 he was commissioned as an ensign His further naval career as a junior officer was uneventful and he appears in this period to have done general service in the French Navy For a time Bruni d Entrecasteaux was Assistant Director of ports and arsenals after which 1785 he was transferred to command a French Squadron in the East Indies comprising Resolution and Subtile 2 During this service he opened up a new route to Canton by way of the Sunda Strait and the Moluccas for use during the south east monsoon season In 1787 he was appointed Governor of the French colony of Isle de France now Mauritius and the Isle of Bourbon 1 His explorations edit nbsp The frigates Recherche and EsperanceIn September 1791 the French Assembly decided to send an expedition in search of Jean Francois de La Perouse who had not been heard of since leaving Botany Bay in March 1788 Bruni d Entrecasteaux was selected to command this expedition He was given a frigate Recherche 500 tons with Lieutenant Jean Louis d Hesmity d Auribeau as his second in command and Elisabeth Rossel among the other officers A similar ship Esperance was placed under Jean Michel Huon de Kermadec 1 with de Trobriand as his second in command A distinguished hydrographical engineer Beautemps Beaupre served as the hydrographer of the expedition When the expedition left Brest on 28 September 1791 Entrecasteaux was promoted to the rank of rear admiral The plan of the voyage was to proceed to New Holland Australia to sight Cape Leeuwin at its southwest extremity then to hug the shore closely all the way to Van Diemen s Land Tasmania inspecting every possible harbour in a rowing boat and then to sail for Tonga aka the Friendly Islands via the northern cape of New Zealand allowing gardener Felix Delahaye to collect live breadfruit plants for transport to the French West Indies D Entrecasteaux was next to follow La Perouse s intended route in the Pacific It was thought that La Perouse had meant to explore New Caledonia and the Louisiade Archipelago to pass through Torres Strait and to explore the Gulf of Carpentaria and the northern coast of New Holland However when Bruni d Entrecasteaux reached Table Bay Cape Town on 17 January 1792 he heard a report that Captain John Hunter later to be Governor of New South Wales had recently seen off the Admiralty Islands canoes manned by indigenous people wearing French uniforms and belts Although Hunter denied this report and although the Frenchmen heard of the denial Bruni d Entrecasteaux determined to make directly to the Admiralty Islands nowadays part of Papua New Guinea taking water and refreshing his crew at Van Diemen s Land On 20 April 1792 that land was in sight and three days later the ships anchored in a harbour which he named Recherche Bay For the next five weeks until 28 May 1792 the Frenchmen carried out careful boat explorations which revealed in detail the beautiful waterways and estuaries in the area Bruni d Entrecasteaux was fortunate in having good officers and scientists most importantly from the exploration point of view the expedition s first hydrographical engineer C F Beautemps Beaupre who is now regarded as the father of modern French hydrography The work this officer did in the field was excellent and his charts when published in France as an Atlas du Voyage de Bruny Dentrecasteaux 1807 were very detailed The atlas contains 39 charts of which those of Van Diemen s Land were the most detailed they remained the source of the English charts of the area for many years Beautemps Beaupre while surveying the coasts with Lieutenant Cretin discovered that Adventure Bay Tasmania which had been discovered by Tobias Furneaux and named after his ship in 1773 was on an island which was separated from the mainland by a fine navigable channel On 16 May d Entrecasteaux commenced to sail the ships through the channel and this was accomplished by the 28th Port Esperance the Huon River and other features were discovered named and charted the admiral s names being given to the channel D Entrecasteaux Channel and the large island Bruny Island separated by it from the mainland On 28 May 1792 the ships sailed into the Pacific to search for La Perouse On 17 June they arrived off the Isle of Pines south of New Caledonia From there d Entrecasteaux sailed northward along the western coast of New Caledonia The Bruni d Entrecasteaux reefs at the northwestern end of the New Caledonia Barrier Reef are named for him He then passed the Solomon Islands along their southern or western coasts sailed through Saint George s Channel between New Ireland and New Britain and on 28 July sighted the south east coast of the Admiralty Islands After three days spent in scrutinizing the eastern and northern coastline Bruni d Entrecasteaux decided that the rumours he had heard in Table Bay must be false and he therefore set sail for Ambon in modern day Indonesia where his ships replenished their stores Leaving Amboina on 14 October Bruni d Entrecasteaux made for Cape Leeuwin the south western extremity of Australia to carry out his original instructions of searching southern New Holland for La Perouse On 6 December land was sighted near Cape Leeuwin and named D Entrecasteaux Point This event was celebrated by feastings and parties one result of which was that the smith on board Recherche Jean Marie Marhadour over indulged and died next day from an apoplectic fit The weather proved boisterous and the ships failed to find King George Sound originally discovered by Vancouver As they sailed further east they penetrated numerous islands and dangerous shoals to which they gave the name D Entrecasteaux Islands later changed to the Recherche Archipelago While the Frenchmen were still in that dangerous area on 12 December a violent storm descended upon them and both ships were nearly wrecked Fortunately however they found an anchorage where they were able to ride out the worst of the gale Landings took place here on the mainland and the locality was named in honour of Legrand who had spotted the anchorage and of the ship he was on Esperance Beautemps Beaupre made a hasty survey of the off lying islands of the archipelago No water was found and on 18 December the ships continued eastward to the head of the Great Australian Bight but here the coast was found to be even more arid and the water position more serious On 4 January 1793 Bruni d Entrecasteaux was forced to leave the coast at a position near Bruni d Entrecasteaux Reef and sail direct to Van Diemen s Land In this decision the French explorer was unfortunate for if he had continued his examination of the southern coast of New Holland he would have made all the geographical discoveries that fell to the lot of Bass and Flinders a few years later Then indeed a French Terre Napoleon might well have become a fact citation needed The ships anchored in Recherche Bay on 22 January and the expedition spent a period of five weeks in that area watering the ships refreshing the crews and carrying out explorations into both natural history and geography Beautemps Beaupre in company with other officers surveyed the northern extensions to Storm Bay the western extension was found to be a mouth of a river which received the name Riviere du Nord it was renamed the Derwent River a few months later by the next visitor to this area Captain John Hayes in Duke of Clarence and Duchess It was probably no coincidence that the d Entrecasteaux expedition should have spent time investigating that part of Van Diemen s Land as that region had been recommended for colonization by Henri Peyroux de la Coudreniere in his c 1784 85 Memoire sur les avantages qui resulteraient d une colonie puissante a la terre de Diemen 3 Although Peyroux s proposal fell on deaf ears at the time it may have influenced d Entrecasteaux s choice of the location to investigate An inset map of Frederick Henry Bay the place recommended by Peyroux for a settlement was included in the map of Van Diemens Land prepared by C F Beautemps Beaupre the hydrographer with the d Entrecasteaux expedition 4 On 28 February d Entrecasteaux sailed from Van Diemen s Land towards Tonga sighting New Zealand and the Kermadec Islands en route At Tonga he found that the local people remembered Cook and Bligh well enough but knew nothing of La Perouse He then sailed back to New Caledonia where he anchored at Balade The vain search for La Perouse then resumed with Santa Cruz then along the southern coasts of the Solomon Islands the northern parts of the Louisiade Archipelago through the Dampier Strait along the northern coast of New Britain and the southern coast of the Admiralty Islands and thence north of New Guinea to the Moluccas By this time the affairs of the expedition had become almost desperate largely because the officers were ardent royalists and the crews equally ardent revolutionaries Kermadec had died of tuberculosis in Balade harbour and on 21 July 1793 d Entrecasteaux himself died of scurvy 1 off the Hermit Islands part of the Bismarck Archipelago in Papua New Guinea Commands were re arranged with Auribeau taking charge of the expedition with Rossel in Kermadec s place The new chief took the ships to Surabaya in east Java Here it was learned that a republic had been proclaimed in France and on 18 February 1794 Auribeau handed his vessels to the Dutch authorities so that the new French Government could not profit by them Auribeau died a month later and Rossel sailed from Java in January 1795 on board a Dutch ship arriving at Table Bay in April 1795 There his ship sailed unexpectedly with the expedition s papers leaving him behind but this vessel was captured by the British Rossel then took passage on a brig of war but this too was captured by the British After the Peace of Amiens in 1802 all the papers of the expedition were returned to Rossel who was thus enabled to publish a narrative of the whole enterprise Australian places named after him editWestern Australia Point D Entrecasteaux34 50 S 116 0 E 34 833 S 116 000 E 34 833 116 000 D Entrecasteaux National Park 34 36 S 115 56 E 34 600 S 115 933 E 34 600 115 933 South Australia D Entrecasteaux Reef 31 58 S 131 55 E 31 967 S 131 917 E 31 967 131 917 Tasmania Bruny Island 43 22 S 147 17 E 43 367 S 147 283 E 43 367 147 283 D Entrecasteaux Channel 43 15 S 147 15 E 43 250 S 147 250 E 43 250 147 250 D Entrecasteaux Monument Historic Site 43 16 S 147 14 E 43 267 S 147 233 E 43 267 147 233 D Entrecasteaux River 43 28 S 146 50 E 43 467 S 146 833 E 43 467 146 833 D Entrecasteaux Watering Place Historic Site 43 34 S 146 53 E 43 567 S 146 883 E 43 567 146 883 5 Eponyms editD Entrecasteaux is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of lizard endemic to Australia Pseudemoia entrecasteauxii 6 See also editEuropean and American voyages of scientific exploration Middle Island Western Australia Notes editCitations edit a b c d Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Entrecasteaux Joseph Antoine Bruni d Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 660 Roche p 386 Paul Roussier Un projet de colonie francaise dans le Pacifique a la fin du XVIII siecle La Revue du Pacifique Annee 6 No 1 15 Janvier 1927 pp 726 733 1 Robert J King Henri Peyroux de la Coudreniere and his plan for a colony in Van Diemen s Land Map Matters Issue 31 June 2017 pp 2 6 2 Archived 13 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine C F Beautemps Beaupre et al Carte generale de la partie meridionale de la Nouvelle Hollande appelee Terre d Anthony Van Diemen comprenant les decouvertes faites dans cette partie par le contre amiral Bruny Dentrecasteaux levee et dressee par C F Beautemps Beaupre ingenieur hydrographe en 1792 et 1793 an 1er de l ere Francaise 1807 lt http nla gov au nla obj 230810451 gt Place Names Search Results Geoscience Australia Australian Government Archived from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 4 March 2022 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Entrecasteaux p 84 References editDouglas Bronwen Fanny Wonu Veys amp Billie Lythberg eds Collecting in the South Seas The Voyage of Bruni d Entrecasteaux 1791 1794 Leiden Sidestone Press 2018 Duyker Edward and Maryse editors and translators 2001 Bruny d Entrecasteaux Voyage to Australia and the Pacific 1791 1793 Melbourne Miegunyah Melbourne University Press xliii 392 pp ISBN 0 522 84932 6 paperback edition March 2006 ISBN 0 522 85232 7 Duyker Edward 2003 Citizen Labillardiere A Naturalist s Life in Revolution and Exploration 1755 1834 Melbourne Miegunyah Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 85010 3 Paperback reprint 2004 ISBN 0 522 85160 6 pp 383 Winner New South Wales Premier s General History Prize 2004 Horner FB 1995 Looking for La Perouse D Entrecasteaux in Australia and the South Pacific 1792 1793 Carlton South Victoria Miegunyah Press ISBN 0 522 84451 0 Marchant Leslie R 1966 Bruny D Entrecasteaux Joseph Antoine Raymond 1739 1793 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 20 August 2009 McLaren Ian F 1993 La Perouse in the Pacific including searches by d Entrecasteaux Dillon Dumont d Urville an annotated bibliography with an introduction by John Dunmore Parkville Victoria University of Melbourne Library ISBN 0 7325 0601 8 Roche Jean Michel 2005 Dictionnaire des batiments de la flotte de guerre francaise de Colbert a nos jours 1671 1870 Group Retozel Maury Millau pp 325 6 ISBN 978 2 9525917 0 6 OCLC 165892922 Van Duuren David Mostert Tristan 2007 Curiosities from the Pacific Ocean A remarkable Rediscovery in the Tropenmuseum Amsterdam Thirteen Ethnographic Objects from the Bruny d Entrecasteaux Expedition 1791 1794 Amsterdam Tropenmuseum Leiden C Zwartenkot ISBN 0 522 84932 6 External links nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux Voyage to Australia and the Pacific Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antoine Bruni d 27Entrecasteaux amp oldid 1173533836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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