The Travels of John Mandeville

The Travels of John Mandeville

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 Direct Answer The Travels of Sir John Mandeville is a fourteenth-century book composed in Anglo-Norman French between roughly 1357 and 1371, surviving in some three hundred manuscripts across at least eleven languages and stitched together from the writings of Odoric of Pordenone, […]

The First Crusade

The First Crusade

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was the First Crusade? The First Crusade (1096-1099) was an armed pilgrimage launched from Latin Christendom in response to Pope Urban II’s sermon at Clermont on 27 November 1095. Tens of thousands of fighters and non-combatants travelled overland to Constantinople, fought […]

The Donner Party Tragedy

The Donner Party Tragedy

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was the Donner Party Tragedy? The Donner Party was a wagon company of roughly eighty-seven Illinois and Missouri emigrants who left Springfield, Illinois in the spring of 1846 for California, took a poorly tested shortcut promoted by the lawyer Lansford W. […]

The Pilgrims’ Voyage on the Mayflower

The Pilgrims' Voyage on the Mayflower

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was the Pilgrims’ Voyage on the Mayflower, and Why Does It Still Matter? The Pilgrims’ voyage on the Mayflower was a sixty-six-day Atlantic crossing carrying 102 English passengers and roughly thirty crew from Plymouth, Devon, on 16 September 1620 to a […]

Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic Voyage

Ernest Shackleton's Antarctic Voyage

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 13, 2026 Last reviewed: May 7, 2026. What Was Shackleton’s Antarctic Voyage and Why Has It Survived a Century? Ernest Henry Shackleton’s Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914 to 1917 was a planned crossing of the Antarctic continent that became, instead, an accidental masterclass in […]

The Expeditions of Roald Amundsen

The Expeditions of Roald Amundsen

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 7, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 Who Was Roald Amundsen and Why Do His Expeditions Still Matter? Roald Engelbregt Gravning Amundsen (1872 to 1928) was the Norwegian polar navigator who first sailed the Northwest Passage, first reached the geographic South Pole, and first crossed the Arctic by air. […]

The Burke and Wills Expedition

The Burke and Wills Expedition

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 6, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was the Burke and Wills Expedition? The Burke and Wills expedition, formally the Victorian Exploring Expedition, was the 1860 to 1861 attempt to cross the Australian continent from south to north. Robert O’Hara Burke (1821-1861), an Irish-born police inspector, led nineteen […]

The Voyages of Captain James Cook

The Voyages of Captain James Cook

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 6, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Were the Voyages of Captain James Cook? The voyages of Captain James Cook (1728-1779) were three British Admiralty expeditions into the Pacific between 1768 and 1779 that produced the first accurate European charts of New Zealand and the eastern Australian coast, […]

The Viking Voyages to Vinland

The Viking Voyages to Vinland

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 6, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was Vinland, and What Have the Vikings Left Behind? Vinland was the Old Norse name for a forested coastal region of northeastern North America that Greenlandic Norse explorers reached around the year 1000 CE. The clearest physical trace is at L’Anse […]

The Search for El Dorado

The Search for El Dorado

By Emilia Wellesley · Published May 6, 2026 · Updated May 8, 2026 What Was the Search for El Dorado? The search for El Dorado was the four-century European pursuit of a treasure that did not exist in the form European explorers were looking for. The phrase began as a nickname, el dorado meaning “the […]