<b>An analysis of the misadventures which befell British Danish and Portuguese merchant mariners in Southeast Asia between 1790 and 1820 a time when British trade and imperialism were expanding.</b><br><br><br>This study describes and analyses the misadventures which befell British Danish and Portuguese 'country traders' that is merchant mariners who operated independently of but with the approval of the English East India Company in Southeast Asia between 1790 and 1820 a time when British trade and imperialism were expanding. It is based on hitherto un-utilised first-hand accounts by captains and crew members as given to authorities at the major port of Malacca. These accounts required by insurance companies were a statement of the events which had occurred and a declaration by the declarant of non-culpability. The misadventures ranged from typhoons groundings and piracy to fire mutiny and collisions with other vessels. <br><br>The work places the misadventures in the context of the contemporary knowledge of navigation of the area's seas current awareness of the local climatic conditions the local indigenous societies and the contemporary European rivalry between the imperial powers. The analysis of the reporting is seen against the background of local administrative arrangements in Dutch-ruled Malacca whereby the British in control from 1795-1818 nevertheless maintained the continuity of Dutch procedures and Dutch personnel. Overall the book provides rich information about everyday life in the eastern seas in the period.
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