Barbara Blaugdone made many journeys on the 17th century land travel, spreading her message in England and Ireland with her faith and motives. In the UK, she traveled over 100 miles and in Ireland she traveled over 200 people. She also sailed several times at the sea. Her travel must be long and difficult as she faces not only the danger of daily roads but also the risk of persecution and imprisonment. Many Quakers followed God's will, traveling through her era, expanding his message a few miles.
When Europeans arrived in Australia in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, they stepped into thousands of generations of men and women's houses. These groups live along the coast and the hinterland and enter the mountain and stone plateau; they prosper in the harsh desert and gather along the waterways and rivers. Australia is a continent, but there are hundreds of different countries, more than 200 language groups, and various cultural, geographical and ecological areas. For new immigrants, these people are simply considered "indigenous peoples" Although different environmental areas have enormous cultural diversity, different groups are called "indigenous peoples".
In the 17th century, the steady flow of adventurers, debtors, opportunists, social abandoners and desperate people on the land where many cultures live often risks a dangerous three month journey It was. The stormy sea creates a better life for the new world. Diseases, illnesses, and death are the purpose of travel that is common in these voyages, many of whom have never finished traveling and life has ended with burial in the sea. Those who have completed their journey come from many parts of the continent of Europe, talking about different languages, different beliefs, customs, skills and talents. When they settle in this new land, they occasionally mix, but more often they gather and create a subculture enclave.