Page:History of New South Wales from the records, Volume 1.djvu/733

 INDEX. 609 Cook equipment coaipiur«d with Phillip'fl, 61. imprawion produced by hii Pint Voyage, Ixviii. mentloiis Australia, 03 n. Broken Bay, 188, 272, 601. Endeavour Btreigftts, xxviii, 172. iudiflerenoe to exploratioa of New Honand, 177. reawm for exploring the east coast, 17& La Ficouse's opinion of his work, 187. quoted by Phillip, 80, 46 n, 272, 280, 282. exouse for literacy defldendes, 00 n. Cook's Slyer not mentioned by Oook. xlii. examined by PhilUp, 144, 26S, 858. the country between river and Gove, 858-0. Pdron's description, xUii, 350 n. Courts of Law constitution and character, 211-7. letters patent constituting them, 531. the Civil Court, 211-2, 581-8. the Criminal Court, 212-7, 454-6, 5S»-«. its first sitting, 274. severity of its sentences, 207. explained, 208. distorted views of crime, 200-10. character and hlstoiy of the Court, 380-400. officers object to sit, 100-111, 402-8, 410. course adopted by PhiUip, 410-20. Court practically a Court-martial, 101, 215, 300. Supreme Court established, 380. the first Chief Justice, S01-4. the first Attorney-General, 301. the first pubUc trials, 886. military Jurors, 800-0. trial by Juiy of twelve, 300. Bigge's report, 801-2, 807-8. Conrt-martial members placed under arrest, 115, 288. Governor's warrant disputed, 116, 848. Judge- Advocate's opinion on the point, 555. power to dedde questions of jurisdiction, llOn. how constituted in England, 215. in Norfolk Island, 208. Cox discovered Cox Bight and Oyster Bay, 170. Criminal law proTMTtion between crime and punishment, 207-10. reflex of the English system, 218-41. administration in the colony, 101, 880-400. illustrated by the case of Mary Turner, 400-7. terror excited, 800 n. historical parallel, 800. oapltal punishment in England, 58, 217, 210-28, . 237,240. flogging in England, 227-32. and in the colony, 58, 101-4-5 n, 207-8, 214. ref onn in England, 28&-40. Dalrymple his works, xxvil, xxviU, 442, 57a on boacd the Endeavour, xxviL speculations as to unknown continent, xxvUi, XXV. used the name Australia in 1770, 87. discovered Torres' track tbrongh the straits, xxvii, 88 n. translation of la ^ uMtrUOia, 00, 01. Bampier popularity of his Voyages, xxv, xxvi, 574. Mofikito Indian, xxvin. intention to explore east coast, xxx. thought New Holland on island, xxxv. considered it port of Terra Australia, ib. impression produced by his accounts of it, xxvI, Ixiv, 177. descriptiou of the natives, 131, 821 n. Darwin lines on Sydney Cove, 200, 850, 518. on Wedgwood's cameo, 648. Dawes second lieutenant of marines, 621. otficer of Engineers and Artillery, 154 n, 522. in charge of the Observatory, 154 n. with King at Botany Bay, 122. attempts to explore Blue Mountains, 154, 157. exouzsiona to Nepeon and Hawkesbury, 102-3. exploration chart, 104-5-8, 181. interest in exploration, 255. Dawes' Point, 154 n, 188, 262. return to England, 521 n. D'Entrecasteanx hU expedition, 174, 500. Depopulation Theory check to emigration in last century, 13. referred to by Matra, 426. and Sir George Young, 430. discussed, 440. Dntch daim to discovery of New Holland, xi. accounts of explorations, xxv, xxvii, xxix, 88. names given by their discoverers, xxxiL Hollandia Nova, xxxi, 86. Nieuw Holland, xxxi. the Stodt-house map, xxxiL the name Terra Australis not appliad to New Holland, xxxiy. at the Cape of Good Hope, 70. assist convicts, 172. ship chartered at Batavia for supplies, 184. Hunter's voyage to England, 185. King's, 103. the spice trade, Ixv. East India Company monopoly of trade in the South Sea, 24, 463. its effect on the trade of the colony, 20 n. enforced by seizure of ship and cargo, 80. Dalrymple's opinion, 468. Digitized by Google