From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Mutineers of the Bounty"
An illustration from the first edition
Author Jules Verne
Original titleLes Révoltés de la Bounty
Translator W. H. G. Kingston
IllustratorS. Drée
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Genre Historical short story
Publication date
1879
Published in English
1879

Mutineers of the Bounty ( French: Les Révoltés de la Bounty [1]), translated in English by English writer W. H. G. Kingston, is a short story by Jules Verne. [2] The story is based on British documents about the Mutiny on the Bounty and was published in 1879 together with the novel The Begum's Fortune (Les cinq cents millions de la Bégum), as a part of the series Les Voyages Extraordinaires (The Extraordinary Voyages).

Unlike many authors covering the topic, Verne concentrates on the deposed captain of the Bounty, William Bligh. After mutineers forced Bligh into the Bounty's 23-foot launch on 28 April 1789, he led loyal crew members on a 6,710 kilometer journey to safety, reaching Timor 47 days later.[ citation needed]

The original text was written by Gabriel Marcel (1843–1909), a geographer from the National Library of France. Jules Verne’s work was proofreading. Verne supposedly bought the rights to the text for 300 francs, but it had not been verified.[ citation needed]

References

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Mutineers of the Bounty"
An illustration from the first edition
Author Jules Verne
Original titleLes Révoltés de la Bounty
Translator W. H. G. Kingston
IllustratorS. Drée
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Genre Historical short story
Publication date
1879
Published in English
1879

Mutineers of the Bounty ( French: Les Révoltés de la Bounty [1]), translated in English by English writer W. H. G. Kingston, is a short story by Jules Verne. [2] The story is based on British documents about the Mutiny on the Bounty and was published in 1879 together with the novel The Begum's Fortune (Les cinq cents millions de la Bégum), as a part of the series Les Voyages Extraordinaires (The Extraordinary Voyages).

Unlike many authors covering the topic, Verne concentrates on the deposed captain of the Bounty, William Bligh. After mutineers forced Bligh into the Bounty's 23-foot launch on 28 April 1789, he led loyal crew members on a 6,710 kilometer journey to safety, reaching Timor 47 days later.[ citation needed]

The original text was written by Gabriel Marcel (1843–1909), a geographer from the National Library of France. Jules Verne’s work was proofreading. Verne supposedly bought the rights to the text for 300 francs, but it had not been verified.[ citation needed]

References

External links


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