
Burckhardt's Travels in Nubia 1822
Description
Title: Travels in Nubia; by the late John Lewis Burckhardt. Published by the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa
Author: Burckhardt, John Lewis
Description: [6], xcviii, 498 pp. Etched frontispiece portrait; 3 copper-engraved maps, 2 of them folding; a few cuts in the text. (4to) 10½x8¼, period full calf, spine tooled in gilt, raised bands, morocco lettering piece; recased with new decorative endpapers. Second Edition.Travels up the Nile by the Swiss-born explorer, who had planned an expedition to search for the source of the Niger under the auspices of the African Association, but, whiled waiting for a caravan, "he made an expedition up the Nile to see the monuments of ancient Egypt, which were then for the first time being revealed to Europeans. He started in January 1813, and before he returned to Aswan at the end of March he had explored the Nile valley as far as Mahas on the northern frontier of the province of Dongola. Being still delayed in his project of discovering the Niger sources by the unrest in the deserts, he made a lengthy stay at Esna, and then, in March 1814, succeeded in making his way through the desert by Berber and Shendi into Abyssinia, coming out at Suakin on 20 July. Thence he crossed over to Jiddah . . . . Burckhardt possessed the best qualifications for a traveller. He prepared meticulously for his voyages, obeying his maxim 'Eile mit Weile' ('more haste less speed'), even when this made it seem to contemporaries that he was slow and hesitant. Daring and yet prudent, a close and accurate observer with an intimate knowledge of the manners and language of the people among whom he travelled, he was able to accomplish feats of exploration which to others would have been impossible. He was zealous in his work, disinterested, generous and open-handed, an affectionate son and brother, and a staunch friend . . . . His journals, which were written with remarkable spirit in spite of the fact that he began to learn English only at the age of twenty-five, and that he had to jot down his observations secretly under his cloak or behind a camel for fear of exciting suspicion among his Arab guides and companions, were published after his death by the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa' (Oxford DNB).
Heading: zziPlace Published: London
Publisher: John Murray
Date Published: 1822
Author: Burckhardt, John Lewis
Description: [6], xcviii, 498 pp. Etched frontispiece portrait; 3 copper-engraved maps, 2 of them folding; a few cuts in the text. (4to) 10½x8¼, period full calf, spine tooled in gilt, raised bands, morocco lettering piece; recased with new decorative endpapers. Second Edition.Travels up the Nile by the Swiss-born explorer, who had planned an expedition to search for the source of the Niger under the auspices of the African Association, but, whiled waiting for a caravan, "he made an expedition up the Nile to see the monuments of ancient Egypt, which were then for the first time being revealed to Europeans. He started in January 1813, and before he returned to Aswan at the end of March he had explored the Nile valley as far as Mahas on the northern frontier of the province of Dongola. Being still delayed in his project of discovering the Niger sources by the unrest in the deserts, he made a lengthy stay at Esna, and then, in March 1814, succeeded in making his way through the desert by Berber and Shendi into Abyssinia, coming out at Suakin on 20 July. Thence he crossed over to Jiddah . . . . Burckhardt possessed the best qualifications for a traveller. He prepared meticulously for his voyages, obeying his maxim 'Eile mit Weile' ('more haste less speed'), even when this made it seem to contemporaries that he was slow and hesitant. Daring and yet prudent, a close and accurate observer with an intimate knowledge of the manners and language of the people among whom he travelled, he was able to accomplish feats of exploration which to others would have been impossible. He was zealous in his work, disinterested, generous and open-handed, an affectionate son and brother, and a staunch friend . . . . His journals, which were written with remarkable spirit in spite of the fact that he began to learn English only at the age of twenty-five, and that he had to jot down his observations secretly under his cloak or behind a camel for fear of exciting suspicion among his Arab guides and companions, were published after his death by the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa' (Oxford DNB).
Heading: zziPlace Published: London
Publisher: John Murray
Date Published: 1822
Condition
Some scuffing, staining and other wear to covers; light foxing to frontispiece and maps, 1 map with repaired stub tear, offset to title-page from the frontispiece, half-title not retained by binder, else very good.
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Burckhardt's Travels in Nubia 1822
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