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First published in 1906, this volume emerged three years after the
British expedition across the Alps to Lhasa, in which the author
took part, and provided a first-hand British account of the
mission. The expedition (also known as the British Invasion of
Tibet) was intended to counter perceived Russian Imperial interests
in access to India through Tibet. Its leaders did not anticipate
the intention of Tibetans to resist the mission. The expedition
allowed L. Austine Waddell, who had the opportunity to learn of
Tibet during a previous posting at Darjeeling, to provide a
first-hand account of Central Tibet, its capital at Lhasa, its
Grand Lama religious hierarchy and its culture through following
the narrative of the controversial British expedition. Despite the
region's historic relations with Asia, Europeans had previously had
more difficulty accessing the country and its culture. This volume
was the third edition in two years, having been made more
accessible to accommodate for its favourable reception by the
British public.
Laurence Austine Waddell (1854-1938) qualified in medicine and
chemistry at Glasgow University and in 1880 embarked on a
successful career in the colonial Indian Medical Service which took
him to Darjeeling, Burma and Tibet, and eventually an academic post
at Calcutta Medical College. In addition, Waddell studied Sanskrit
and published extensively on Tibet (his books Among the Himalayas
(1899) and Lhasa and its Mysteries (1905) are also reissued in the
Cambridge Library Collection). This landmark study of Tibetan
Buddhism first appeared in 1895. Waddell cites earlier European
scholarship, including that of Burnouf (also reissued), but
emphasises that his book is based on original field research at
temples and among the lay population. It covers the history of
Tibetan Buddhism, its relationship with other branches of Buddhism,
doctrine, places of worship, rituals and festivals, popular
religion and the occult. It also includes around 200 illustrations
and a substantial bibliography.
A successful officer in the colonial Indian Medical Service,
Glasgow-educated Laurence Austine Waddell (1854-1938) was
fascinated by the landscapes and cultures of Darjeeling and Tibet,
studied local languages, and spent his leisure time researching and
writing on Tibetan topics. His earlier books The Buddhism of Tibet
(1895) and Among the Himalayas (1899) are also reissued in the
Cambridge Library Collection. Waddell had attempted to enter Lhasa
(then closed to foreigners) in disguise in 1892, but did not
succeed until he accompanied the controversial British expedition
to Tibet in 1903-4; he describes his arrival there as 'the
realisation of a vivid and long-cherished dream'. His eyewitness
account of how the 'peaceful mission' became an 'invasion' occupies
the first half of this 1905 publication. The later chapters vividly
portray the city and its inhabitants. The book includes more than a
hundred of Waddell's own photographs, as well as maps and line
drawings.
Laurence Austine Waddell (1854-1938) spent twenty-five years as a
medical officer in the colonial Indian Medical Service. Fascinated
by the landscapes and cultures of Darjeeling and Tibet, and
inspired by reports from British spies surveying the remote
Himalayan valleys, Waddell studied local languages, and spent his
leisure time researching and writing on Tibetan topics. His books
The Buddhism of Tibet (1895) and Lhasa and its Mysteries (1905) are
also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection. This 1899
publication, illustrated with photographs and drawings, claims to
describe 'the grandest part of the grandest mountains in the
world', for the first time since Hooker (whose 1854 Himalayan
Journals are also reissued), and anticipates today's trekking
industry. Waddell's colourful account of jungles, snakes, glaciers,
yaks, dizzying mountain ridges, rickety bamboo bridges, tribal
peoples and unfamiliar food aims to 'bring home to the reader a
whiff of the bracing breezes of the Himalayas'.
1924. Partial Contents: Phoenicians Discovered to be Aryans.
Undeciphered Phoenician Inscriptions. Decipherment and Translation.
Personal, Ethnic and Geographic Phoenician Names and Titles. Who
Were the Picts and Celts? Aryanizing Civilization of Picts and
Celts. Prehistoric Stone Circles in Britain. Prehistoric Cup
Marking on Circles. Sun Worship. Sun Cross. St. Andrew as Patron
Saint. Corn Spirit. Aryan Phoenician Racial Element. Historical
Effects of the Discoveries. With Over One Hundred Illustrations and
Maps.
1927. Part I. A-F. An Etymological Lexicon of the English and Other
Aryan Languages Ancient and Modern and the Sumerian Origin of
Egyptian and its Hieroglyphs. See other titles by this author
available from Kessinger Publishing.
1927. Part I. A-F. An Etymological Lexicon of the English and Other
Aryan Languages Ancient and Modern and the Sumerian Origin of
Egyptian and its Hieroglyphs. See other titles by this author
available from Kessinger Publishing.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1905 Edition.
This is a new release of the original 1930 edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1895 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1899 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1894 Edition.
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