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Blown off course

To be blown off course in the sailing ship era meant be to diverted by unexpected winds, getting lost possibly to shipwreck or to a new destination. In the ancient world, this was especially a great danger before the maturation of the Maritime Silk Road in the Early Middle Ages, finding expression in the writing of Cosmas Indicopleustes. Even in later eras, the ship could attempt to limit its divergence by tacking or heaving to, but it was often difficult to keep track by mere celestial navigation before the invention of the marine chronometer in the late 18th century.

Historical voyages
• 640 BC: Colaeus • 116 BC: Eudoxus of Cyzicus • 62 BC: "Indos quosdem", survivors of an Indian shipwreck in Suebi presented to Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer, as recorded by Cornelius Nepos and Pomponius Mela • 50: Rhapta • 412: Faxian • 986: Bjarni Herjólfsson • 999: Leif Erikson • 1312: Lancelotto Malocello • 1349: Giovanni de' Marignolli • 1406: Thorstein Olafsson • 1418: João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz Teixeira • 1488: Bartolomeu Dias • 1500: 2nd Portuguese India Armada • 1505: Lourenço de Almeida • 1525: Gomes de Sequeira • 1527: Narváez expedition • 1535: Fray Tomás de Berlanga • 1543: António Mota • 1578: Golden Hind • 1599: Dirck Gerritsz Pomp • 1609: Sea Venture • 1615: Eggert Ólafsson • 1616: Eendracht • 1620: Mayflower • 1638: Nuestra Señora de la Concepción • 1654: Jewish arrival in New Amsterdam • 1675: Anthony de la Roché • 1707: Scilly naval disaster • 1770: First voyage of James Cook • 1815: Arniston ==Historical states and lost sailors==
Historical states and lost sailors
Lê dynasty in Vietnam • Sakoku in Japan ==In popular culture==
In popular culture
Accidental travel as plot device • OdysseyAeneidA True StorySinbad the SailorThe Tempest • ''Gulliver's Travels'' • Wasobyoe • "MS. Found in a Bottle" ==See also==
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