The Strange Adventures of Andrew Battell, of Leigh, in Angola and the Adjoining…

(14 User reviews)   4808
By Rebecca King Posted on Dec 22, 2025
In Category - Faith & Religion
Battell, Andrew, 1560-1613 Battell, Andrew, 1560-1613
English
Ever wonder what it was like to be captured by pirates, sold into slavery, and then spend nearly two decades living in a kingdom in West Africa during the 1500s? That’s exactly what happened to Andrew Battell. This isn't a novel—it’s his real-life account, pieced together from his wild stories. It reads like the most unbelievable adventure tale, filled with battles, strange animals he calls 'monsters,' and powerful African rulers. The main mystery is how much of this incredible story is true, and how much is the exaggeration of a man who lived through things most of us can't even imagine. It's a firsthand ticket to a world that history books often gloss over.
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SIR CLEMENTS MARKHAM, K.C.B., F.R.S., _Pres. R.G.S._, PRESIDENT. THE RIGHT HON. THE LORD STANLEY OF ALDERLEY, VICE-PRESIDENT. REAR-ADMIRAL SIR WILLIAM WHARTON, K.C.B., VICE-PRESIDENT. COMMR. B. M. CHAMBERS, R.N. C. RAYMOND BEAZLEY, M.A. COLONEL G. EARL CHURCH. SIR W. MARTIN CONWAY. F. H. H. GUILLEMARD, M.A., M.D. EDWARD HEAWOOD, M.A. DUDLEY F. A. HERVEY, C.M.G. E. F. IM THURN, C.B., C.M.G. J. SCOTT KELTIE, LL.D. F. W. LUCAS. A. P. MAUDSLAY. E. J. PAYNE, M.A. HOWARD SAUNDERS. H. W. TRINDER. CHARLES WELCH, F.S.A. WILLIAM FOSTER, B.A., _Honorary Secretary_. CONTENTS. PAGE INTRODUCTION i BIBLIOGRAPHY xviii THE STRANGE ADVENTURES OF ANDREW BATTELL OF LEIGH. I. Andrew Battell, his voyage to the River of Plate, who being taken on to the coast of Brazill was sent to Angola 1 II. His trading on the coast; offer to escape; imprisonment; exile; escape and new imprisonment; his sending to Elamba and Bahia das Vaccas; many strange occurrences 9 III. Discovery of the Gagas: their wars, man-eating; over-running countries. His trade with them, betraying, escape to them, and living with them; with many strange adventures. And also the rites and manner of life observed by the Iagges, or Gagas, which no Christian would ever know well but this author 19 IV. His return to the Portugals: invasions of diverse countries; abuses; flight from them, and living in the woods divers months; his strange boat and coming to Loango 36 V. Of the province of Engoy, and other regions of Loango; with the customs there observed by the King and people 42 VI. Of the provinces of Bongo, Calongo, Mayombe, Manikesocke, Motimbas; of the ape-monster Pongo; their Hunting, Idolatries, and divers other observations 52 VII. Of the Zebra and Hippopotamus; the Portuguese Wars in those parts; the Fishing, Grain, and other things remarkable 63 ON THE RELIGION AND THE CUSTOMS OF THE PEOPLES OF ANGOLA, CONGO, AND LOANGO, from _Purchas His Pilgrimage_, 1613 (1617) 71 APPENDICES. I. ANTHONY KNIVET IN KONGO AND ANGOLA 89 II. A SKETCH OF THE HISTORY OF KONGO TO THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 102 III. A LIST OF THE KINGS OF KONGO 136 IV. A SKETCH OF THE HISTORY OF ANGOLA TO THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 139 V. A LIST OF THE GOVERNORS OF ANGOLA 188 INDEX AND GLOSSARY 191 MAPS. A GENERAL MAP OF KONGO AND ANGOLA. AN ENLARGED MAP OF ANGOLA. [Illustration] INTRODUCTION. Four Englishmen are known to have visited Angola towards the close of the sixteenth century, namely, Thomas Turner, Andrew Towres, Anthony Knivet and Andrew Battell. All four were taken by the Portuguese out of English privateers in South-American waters, and spent years of captivity as prisoners of war; happy, no doubt, in having escaped the fate of many of their less fortunate companions, who atoned with their lives for the hazardous proceedings in which they had engaged. Thomas Turner,[1] although he furnished Samuel Purchas with a few notes on Brazil, never placed on record what happened to him whilst in Portuguese Africa. Towres was sent to prison at Rio de Janeiro for the heinous offence of eating meat on a Friday; he attempted an escape, was retaken, and condemned to spend the rest of his captivity in Angola. He died at Masanganu, as we learn from Knivet. Knivet himself has left us an account of his adventures in Angola and Kongo; but this account contains so many incredible statements that it was with some hesitation we admitted it into this volume, as by doing so we might be supposed to vouch for the writer’s veracity. Andrew Battell, fortunately, has left behind him a fairly circumstantial...

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This book is Andrew Battell's own story, as told to a writer named Samuel Purchas. In the 1580s, Battell was an English sailor captured by Portuguese privateers off the coast of Brazil. Instead of being ransomed, he was taken to Angola, a Portuguese colony in West Africa. He escaped, was recaptured, and ended up living among the Imbangala warriors and later in the Kingdom of Kongo for about eighteen years. His account describes fierce battles, the inner workings of the Kongo court, and the brutal realities of the early transatlantic slave trade from a very unusual perspective—that of a European who was both an outsider and, at times, a participant.

Why You Should Read It

Forget dry historical records. Battell's voice feels startlingly direct. He talks about seeing 'monsters' (likely gorillas or hippos), describes local customs without the heavy bias of later colonial writers, and gives us a messy, complicated view of a time when Africa and Europe were just beginning their fraught relationship. You're not getting a polished history lesson; you're getting the raw, unfiltered memories of a survivor. It makes you question everything you think you know about 'explorers' and 'discovery.'

Final Verdict

This is a must-read for anyone who loves real-life adventures that are stranger than fiction. It's perfect for history buffs tired of the same old European narratives, and for travel writing fans who crave something genuinely unique and unsettling. Be warned: it's a fragmentary, sometimes confusing read because it's based on old interviews. But that roughness is part of its magic—it feels like listening to an old sailor spin a yarn in a tavern, wondering just how much to believe.



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Christopher Davis
2 months ago

Text is crisp, making it easy to focus.

Emily Nguyen
10 months ago

Having read this twice, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Thanks for sharing this review.

Lisa Rodriguez
1 year ago

Clear and concise.

Paul Davis
1 year ago

Solid story.

Betty Walker
2 months ago

Helped me clear up some confusion on the topic.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (14 User reviews )

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