Mutiny on The Cyprus (1829) - ebook

$10.00

In August 1829, convicts seized the government brig Cyprus while anchored in a remote bay of Van Diemen’s Land and carried the vessel thousands of miles across the Pacific. The mutiny is often recalled as a maritime curiosity. This novel approaches it differently.

The Mutiny on the Cyprus (1829) is a rigorously grounded work of historical fiction that reconstructs the event from within the daily labour of a small brig and the institutional systems that governed nineteenth-century seafaring. Told in the first person by a fictional yet historically plausible participant, the novel traces not only the seizure of the vessel but the long consequences that followed: navigation under coercion, fragile authority at sea, encounters with unfamiliar shores, and the eventual reassertion of Admiralty law.

Rather than romanticising piracy or rebellion, the book focuses on process. It examines how ships function as regulated spaces, how command is asserted and contested aboard working vessels, and how maritime order extends beyond the horizon through legal and bureaucratic systems. Particular attention is paid to seamanship, navigation, provisioning, and the material realities of long Pacific voyages, as well as to the treatment of the Cyprus as an object subject to ownership, seizure, and legal interpretation.

The novel concludes with the return of the surviving mutineers to British jurisdiction and the Admiralty trials that followed, situating the voyage within the wider framework of maritime law and imperial governance. Grounded in archival research and written with deliberate restraint, The Mutiny on the Cyprus (1829) offers a maritime narrative concerned less with adventure than with consequence, record, and erasure.

In August 1829, convicts seized the government brig Cyprus while anchored in a remote bay of Van Diemen’s Land and carried the vessel thousands of miles across the Pacific. The mutiny is often recalled as a maritime curiosity. This novel approaches it differently.

The Mutiny on the Cyprus (1829) is a rigorously grounded work of historical fiction that reconstructs the event from within the daily labour of a small brig and the institutional systems that governed nineteenth-century seafaring. Told in the first person by a fictional yet historically plausible participant, the novel traces not only the seizure of the vessel but the long consequences that followed: navigation under coercion, fragile authority at sea, encounters with unfamiliar shores, and the eventual reassertion of Admiralty law.

Rather than romanticising piracy or rebellion, the book focuses on process. It examines how ships function as regulated spaces, how command is asserted and contested aboard working vessels, and how maritime order extends beyond the horizon through legal and bureaucratic systems. Particular attention is paid to seamanship, navigation, provisioning, and the material realities of long Pacific voyages, as well as to the treatment of the Cyprus as an object subject to ownership, seizure, and legal interpretation.

The novel concludes with the return of the surviving mutineers to British jurisdiction and the Admiralty trials that followed, situating the voyage within the wider framework of maritime law and imperial governance. Grounded in archival research and written with deliberate restraint, The Mutiny on the Cyprus (1829) offers a maritime narrative concerned less with adventure than with consequence, record, and erasure.

How to Download and Read Your Ebook

Thank you for your purchase. Your ebook is delivered as an EPUB file, which works on most reading apps and devices. Follow the steps below for your device.

Step 1: Download your ebook

  • After checkout, you will receive an email with a download link.

  • Click the link and save the EPUB file to your device.

  • Download links expire after 24 hours, but clicking the link again will automatically send you a fresh one.

Reading on iPhone or iPad (Apple Books)

  1. Open the downloaded EPUB file.

  2. Tap the Share icon.

  3. Choose Books.

  4. Your ebook will open in Apple Books and stay there permanently.

Reading on Android (Google Play Books)

  1. Open the Google Play Books app.

  2. Tap your profile icon, then Settings, then Upload books
    or
    Email the EPUB file to yourself and tap Upload to Play Books.

  3. Find your ebook under Library > Uploads.

Reading on Kindle (Kindle device or Kindle app)

Kindle does not open EPUB files directly by tapping them. You will use Send to Kindle.

  1. Download your EPUB file.

  2. Go to the Send to Kindle page or app.

  3. Upload the EPUB file or email it to your Kindle email address.

  4. The ebook will appear in your Kindle library like any other book.

Tip: This is the same method many authors and publishers use for direct ebook sales.

Reading on Kobo

You have two easy options:

  • Open the Kobo app on your phone or tablet and import the EPUB file.

  • Connect your Kobo to a computer and drag the EPUB file onto the device.

Your ebook will then appear in your Kobo library.

Having trouble?

  • Make sure the file ends in .epub

  • Try downloading again using the link in your email

  • If you need help, contact us and we will be happy to assist

Happy reading, and thank you for supporting independent authors.