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After William Hodges (1744-97)

Plates from Captain Cook's second voyage, 1772-1775. 1777

64.0 x 53.3 x 2.0 cm (book measurement (conservation)) | RCIN 1140450

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  • William Hodges was the artist selected to accompany the second voyage (1772-5) of Captain Cook. He made detailed, sometimes exaggerated, drawings and paintings of the places visited by the expedition, the peoples they encountered, the artefacts they collected and the lands they uncovered. These plates would have accompanied the two-volume published journal printed in 1777, but appear to have been re-mounted into a large album in the nineteenth century.

    Cook's second voyage was the voyage that cemented his reputation as a navigator. Although the Endeavour voyage of 1769-71 confirmed that New Zealand was an archipelago and charted the east coast of Australia, some members of the Royal Society still believed in the existence of a Terra Australis incognita, an unknown southern continent. Cook was commanded to find this continent in a new expedition with the ships HMS Resolution and HMS Adventure.

    The ships left Plymouth in July 1772 and sailed towards the Antarctic Circle, crossing it for the first time in January 1773. Antarctic fog and sea-ice separated the two ships in February, and both sailed for a rendezvous in New Zealand that had been charted by Cook three years previously.

    On the way to New Zealand, the Adventure, commanded by Tobias Furneaux, surveyed the southern coast of Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) before reaching the rendezvous in mid-March 1773. Cook arrived with the Resolution in May 1773. From June, both ships sailed across the South Pacific, making stops at Tahiti, Ra'iatea and Tonga before returning to New Zealand where the Adventure made for home. At Ra'iatea, the expedition picked up a young Polynesian man named Omai (or Mai) who travelled with the Adventure to London, arriving in November 1774.  Omai spent two years in London where he was much admired and was introduced to many influential figures of the age, including George III. Cook returned him to Ra'iatea in 1777 during his fateful third voyage in the Pacific.

    After the departure of Adventure, Cook left New Zealand in order to further explore the Antarctic Circle. Resolution made two more penetrations into the sea-ice but was forced to return northwards in late January 1774.  Cook then made several further sweeps of the Pacific, making stops at Easter Island, Tonga and several other islands and atolls across the ocean before declaring that the fabled continent did not exist.

  • Measurements

    64.0 x 53.3 x 2.0 cm (book measurement (conservation))

  • Alternative title(s)

    [Captn. Cook's voyage : plates].