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Travellers in the Great Steppe - From the Papal Envoys to the Russian Revolution (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R565
Discovery Miles 5 650
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Travellers in the Great Steppe - From the Papal Envoys to the Russian Revolution (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R565
Discovery Miles 5 650
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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The Great Steppe stretches from the Volga River and the Caspian Sea
in the west to the easternmost limits of Djungaria in Western
China. Sometimes referred to as the biggest field in the world,
this vast region is as mysterious today as it was a thousand years
ago. Despite modern development it remains little visited and
little known. This was once a land of nomads, barren and harsh at
its centre, but with rich grasslands fed by the many rivers flowing
from the surrounding mountains. It was home to a society that kept
no records other than the epic poems and songs celebrating the
stories of its great batyrs (warriors). Whatever is known of this
society survives within local culture - desecrated as it is by
years of Soviet cultural vandalism - or in the voices of outsiders
who occasionally passed through. Usually they were on their way
elsewhere - to India, China, Tibet - but occasionally there were
visitors who took more than a passing interest in the lives of the
steppe nomads. Their findings and impressions are collected in this
book. Edited and told with relish by Nick Fielding, these are the
stories of early papal emissaries like Friar William of Rubruck and
Jean de Piano Carpini, sent to negotiate with the Mongols, and the
merchant adventurers like Andrew Jenkinson and Jonas Hanway who
tried to capture the Silk Road trade. Later came the early
scientists and geographers associated with Peter Simon Pallas and
the Russian explorers exemplified by Chokan Walikhanov and Petr
Petrovich Semenov. Thomas and Lucy Atkinson became the earliest
British visitors to spend time in the steppe. They were followed by
military adventurers such as Captain Fred Burnaby and James Abbott,
and journalists including the great Aloysius MacGahan and David
Ker, the original purveyor of 'fake news'. Besides Lucy Atkinson
there were other determined women travellers including Adele
Hommaire de Hell and the remarkable Marie de Ujfalvy-Bourdon, both
of whom documented life in the Great Steppe. Cambridge scientist
William Bateson spent 18 months traversing the steppes looking for
snail shells in the 1880s, and by the end of the 19th century the
first tourists - some, like R L Jefferson, on bicycle - were
arriving, to be followed by mining engineers and agricultural
merchants. All have a tale to tell.
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