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Alexander Selkirk Biography

Sailor / Castaway

A true-life castaway, Alexander Selkirk was the inspiration for Daniel Defoe's 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe. While sailing with English privateers in 1704, Selkirk quarrelled with his captain and asked to be put ashore on an uninhabited island off of South America. He took with him a musket, a hatchet, and a few utensils. There he survived alone for over four years before being rescued by another English ship, with whom he sailed for two years before returning home.

Extra credit: The island where Selkirk left his ship is now called Robinson Crusoe Island; it was formerly known as Más a Tierra or Aguas Buenas.

Four Good Links

The Real Robinson Crusoe

Brief history of Selkirk and his island

Trapped on a Pacific Island

Nifty 2009 report from Spiegel Online

Robinson Crusoe Island

A brief history of the island Selkirk probably lived on

Evidence of Selkirk's Campsite

Science Daily's account of 2008 news from an archaeological dig

Vital Stats

Birth

c. 1676

Birthplace

Lower Largo, Fife, Scotland

Death

12 December 1721
(yellow fever (?))

Best Known As

The model for Robinson Crusoe