Dinesh's photos with the keyword: Tim Joyner

Tupinamba Indians fishing in Brazil

30 Jan 2022 1 1 103
Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University Tupinamba Indians fishing in Brazil. Of the Indians Magellan’s expedition met in Rio de Janero, Anttonio Pigafetta noted: “For a fishhook or a knife they would offer five or six chickens; a part of geese for a comb; for a small mirror or a pair of sessors, enough fish to fee ten people; for a bell or a ribbon, a basket of [sweet] potatoes that taste like nuts or turnips. For the king in a deck of playing cards such as we use in Italy, they gave six chickens, thinking that they had got the better of me.

Magellan

29 Jan 2022 1 118
. . . Although he was a short man, Magellan’s magnificent black beard, soldierly bearing, and calm self-assurance gave him the appearance of a man who knew what he was about and who would not be bulled or suffer fools lightly. His convictions were based on personal experience and close study of available documents and maps on the geography of the far east and southwest Atlantic. He carried maps, globes, and Serrao’s letters to illustrate his arguments. His plain, heavily accented speech was in marked contrast to the flowery verbosity so common at court. Magellan was a different breed from the usual run of hopeful petitioners crowding the anterooms to the offices of King Charles’s counselors. Among these were impoverished adventurers desperate to gain fame and fortune overseas, and professional seafarers such as Gomes, a pilot who yearned to command a royal fleet. What set Magellan apart from most of these petitioners was his quiet dignity. He avoided flamboyant overstatement as unbefitting a nobleman, and presented his ideas with a firm, understated authority, letting his carefully reasoned arguments stand on their merits. ~ Page 83 www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBApHzTZ6BI&t=1s
21 Jan 2022 1 2 66
Adapted by the author from a drawing in the Okinawan Prefectural Museum And then went down to ship, Set keel to breakers, forth on the godly sea, . . . ~ Ezra Pound, ‘Canto I’

Magellanic Clouds

20 Jan 2022 1 85
They’re visible in the southern sky, and for centuries people have gazed up at them. They’re named after the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan, in our current times. The Magellanic Clouds have been known since ancient times to indigenous peoples across South America and Africa, and from the first millennium in Western Asia. The first preserved mention of the Large Magellanic Cloud is believed to be in petroglyphs and rock drawings found in Chile. They may be the objects mentioned by the polymath Ibn Qutaybah (d. 889 CE), in his book on Al-Anwā̵’ (the stations of the Moon in pre-Islamic Arabian culture): "وأسفل من سهيل قدما سهيل . وفى مجرى قدمى سهيل، من خلفهما كواكب زهر كبار، لا ترى بالعراق، يسميها أهل تهامة الأعبار en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magellanic_Clouds