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CASTAWAY


U.S. merchant seamen try to revive a shipwrecked Filipino fisherman rescued in the South China Sea.

Castaways may need to survive on a desert island.

A 'castaway' is a person who is cast adrift or ashore. While the situation usually happens after a shipwreck, some people voluntarily stay behind on a deserted island either to evade their captors or the world in general. Alternatively a person or item can be 'cast away', meaning rejected or discarded.
The provisions and resources available to castaways allow them to live on the island until other people arrive to take them off the island. However, such rescue missions may never happen if the person is not known to still be alive, the fact that they are missing is unknown or if the island is not mapped. These scenarios have given rise to the plots of numerous stories in the form of novels and film.

Contents
Real occurrences
Thorgisl
Grettir Ásmundarson
Fernão Lopez
A Miskito called Will
Alexander Selkirk
Philip Ashton
Leendert Hasenbosch
Charles Barnard
Other castaways
Castaways in popular culture
''Desert Island Discs''
See also
References
External links

Real occurrences


Thorgisl

Icelander Thorgisl set out to travel to Greenland. He and his party were first driven into a remote sound on the east coast of Greenland, then Thorgisl, his infant son and several others were abandoned there by their thralls. Thorgisl and his party traveled slowly along the coast to the Eystribyggð settlement of Eric the Red, on the southwest coast of Greenland. Along the way they met a viking, an outlaw, who had escaped to East Greenland. This history is told in Flóamanna Saga and Origines Islandicae and occurred during the early years of viking Greenland, while Leif Ericson was still alive.
Grettir Ásmundarson

Main articles: Grettir Ásmundarson

Icelander Grettir Ásmundarson was outlawed by the assembly in Iceland. After many years on the run he, with two companions, went to the forbidding island of Drangey, where he lived several more years before his pursuers managed to kill him in 1031.
Fernão Lopez

Main articles: Fernão Lopez

The Portuguese Fernão Lopez was marooned on the island of Saint Helena in 1513. He had lost a hand and much of his face as a punishment for mutiny. With some interruptions he stayed on the island until his death in 1545.
A Miskito called Will

Main articles: Will (Indian)

In 1681, a Miskito named Will (he had been given that name by his English comrades) was sent ashore as part of an English foraging party to Más a Tierra. When he was hunting for goats in the interior of the island he suddenly saw his comrades departing in haste after having spotted the approach of enemies, leaving Will behind to survive until he was picked up in 1684.
Alexander Selkirk

Main articles: Alexander Selkirk

The Juan Fernández Islands, to which Más a Tierra belongs, was to have a more famous occupant from October 1703 when Alexander Selkirk made the decision to stay there. (Selkirk had been born in Lower Largo in Scotland in 1680). Selkirk was concerned about the condition of the ''Cinque Ports'', on which he was sailing, and remained on the island – the ship later sunk with most of its crew being lost. Being a voluntary castaway, Selkirk was able to gather numerous provisions to help him to survive, including a musket, gunpowder, carpenter's tools, a knife, a Bible, and his clothing. He survived on the island for four years and four months, building huts and hunting the plentiful wildlife before his rescue on 2 February 1709. His adventures were a direct inspiration for ''Robinson Crusoe'', a novel by Daniel Defoe first published in 1719 and sometimes regarded as the first novel in English. In 1966 Más a Tierra was renamed Robinson Crusoe Island.
Philip Ashton

Main articles: Philip Ashton

Philip Ashton, born in Marblehead in New England in 1702, was captured by pirates while fishing near the coast of Nova Scotia in the June of 1722. He managed to escape in March 1723 when their ship landed at Roatán in the Bay Islands of Honduras, hiding in the jungle until the pirates left him there. He survived for 16 months, in spite of many insects, tropical heat and alligators. He had no equipment at all until he met another castaway, an Englishman. The Englishman disappeared after a few days but he left behind a knife, gunpowder, tobacco and more. Ashton was finally rescued by the ''Diamond'', a ship from Salem.[1]
Leendert Hasenbosch

Main articles: Leendert Hasenbosch

'Leendert Hasenbosch' was a Dutch ship's officer (a bookkeeper), probably born in 1695. He was set ashore on uninhabited Ascension Island on 5 May 1725 as a punishment for sodomy. He was left behind with a tent and a survival kit and an amount of water for about four weeks. He had bad luck that no ships called at the island during his stay. He ate seabirds and green turtles but he probably died of thirst after about six months. He wrote a diary that was found by British mariners in January 1726 who brought the diary to Britain. The diary was rewritten and published a number of times.
As late as 2002 the full truth of the story was disclosed in a book by the Dutch historian Michiel Koolbergen (1953–2002), the first book to mention Leendert by name; before that time, the castaway's name had been unknown. The story is available in English.[2]
Charles Barnard

Main articles: Charles Barnard

In 1812, the British ship ''Isabella'', captained by George Higton, was shipwrecked off Eagle Island (part of the Falkland Islands). Most of the crew were rescued by the American sealer ''Nanina'', commanded by Captain Charles Barnard. However, realising that they would require more provisions for the expanded number of passengers, Barnard and a few others went out in a party to retrieve more food. During his absence the ''Nanina'' was taken over by the British crew, who left them on the island. Barnard and his party were finally rescued in November of 1814. In 1829, Barnard wrote ''A Narrative of the Sufferings and Adventures of Captain Charles Barnard'' detailing the happenings.
Other castaways


Gerald Kingsland

Nakahama Manjiro

Tom Neale a 20th century man from New Zealand who voluntarily stayed alone on a small island

Otokichi

Pedro Serrano

Juana María ("The Lone Woman of San Nicolas")

Ada Blackjack an Inuit woman on Wrangel Island between 1921 and 1923

★ 22 men of Ernest Shackleton's crew on Elephant Island off the Antarctic Peninsula for 4 months in 1916

Alain Bombard

HMAV Bounty's mutineers and Tahitian women

★ Sixteen people who were washed onto an island during the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami and were rescued after two months

Jesus Vidana, Salvador Ordoñez and Lucio Rendon. Three Mexican fishermen from the port of San Blas, Nayarit who sailed 5500 miles before being rescued 200 miles from Marshall Islands on August 9, 2006

Castaways in popular culture


''Robinson Crusoe and Man Friday'' by Carl Offterdinger.

Various novels, television shows and films tell the story of castaways:

★ ''Survivor'', a CBS television reality series that pits contestants against each other on various remote island areas

★ ''Baby Island'', a 1937 novel by Carol Ryrie Brink about two preteen sisters caring for four babies on a South Seas island

★ ''The Blue Lagoon'', a 1908 romance novel by Henry De Vere Stacpoole about two children stranded on a tropical island after a shipwreck which was adapted into the 1980 film starring Brooke Shields and Christopher Atkins

★ ''Cast Away'', a 2000 film starring Tom Hanks, directed by Robert Zemeckis

★ ''Castaway'', a 1986 film starring Amanda Donohoe and Oliver Reed, and directed by Nicolas Roeg, based on the book ''Castaway'' by Lucy Irvine (next).

★ ''Castaway'', a 1984 book by Lucy Irvine describing her life with Gerald Kingsland on a deserted island which was adapted into a 1986 film starring Amanda Donohoe and Oliver Reed

★ ''Castaway 2000'', a British reality television series in which a volunteer community lived for a year on the previously uninhabited Taransay in the Outer Hebrides

★ '', a 1999 PC game created by The Learning Company

★ ''Gilligan's Island'', an American TV sitcom which aired on CBS from 1964 to 1967

★ ''Hatchet'', a novel that follows the life of a teenage boy as he survives in the Canadian wilderness after the plane he was on crashes. While he was brought into the situation by a plane, ''Hatchet's plot (and most survivalist fiction) features many similar elements to castaway stories.

★ ''Island of the Blue Dolphins'', a book by Scott O'Dell about a girl marooned on an island for 18 years

★ ''Life of Pi'', in which the title character, Pi Patel, spends months on a lifeboat with a Bengal Tiger

★ ''Johnny Castaway'', a screensaver -pehaps the most extensive ever- that follows the daily exploits of the screensaver's namesake.

★ ''Lord of the Flies'', a novel by William Golding, and several movie versions

★ ''Lost'', a 2004 drama series

★ ''Mr. Robinson Crusoe'', a 1932 Douglas Fairbanks movie

★ ''The Mysterious Island'', a 1874 novel by Jules Verne

★ ''Robinson Crusoe'', a novel by Daniel Defoe based loosely on the real life of Alexander Selkirk, first published in 1719 and sometimes regarded as the first novel in English

★ ''The Swiss Family Robinson'', an 1812 book by Johann David Wyss that has been adapted into various film and television versions
Castaways are part of other stories as well, where the event is not the central plot but is still an important aspect. Examples include:

★ ''The Black Stallion (film)''

★ ''The Road to El Dorado''

★ ''Titanic'' (the 1997 film)
The idea of a character becoming a castaway is common in television series, particularly ones that utilise the scenario for comic effect – it is a more extreme version of a character being stranded, but less likely and therefore more appropriate for non-serious series. Series that have had an episode about castaways include:

★ ''Family Guy'' episode "The Perfect Castaway"

★ ''Full House'' episode "Tanner Island"

★ ''Futurama'' episode "Obsoletely Fabulous"

★ ''The Mighty Boosh'' episode "The Nightmare of Milky Joe"
''Desert Island Discs''

''Desert Island Discs'' is a BBC Radio 4 chatshow in which the subject is invited to consider themselves as a castaway on a desert island, and then select their eight favourite records, favourite book and a luxury inanimate object to occupy their time. This concept has become so widespread as to have become a part of popular culture.

See also



Desert island

Marooning

Stowaway

Castaway 2000 and 2007

References


1. "Pirate Biographies" at The New England Pirate Museum. Accessed 4 December 2005.
2. Alex Ritsema, book "A Dutch Castaway on Ascension Island in 1725" ISBN 978-1-4116-9832-1 2006 and Michiel Koolbergen, book "Een Hollandse Robinson Crusoë", ISBN ISBN 90-74622-23-2 2002


Adams, Cecil (2 December 2005). Not necessarily Lost: Are there actual cases of castaways who have been rescued? at The Straight Dope. Accessed 4 December 2005.

External links



★ "Pilot dumps drunk man on island" at BBC News – a man is cast away on Porto Santo Island after being abusive on a flight.

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Castaway Companies
Below is the list of travel companies in Castaway we have in our travel directory