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On 4 August 2020 a massive explosion in the port area obliterated
parts of Beirut and damaged many others, bringing fresh
international attention to a city already recovering from civil war
and weakened by economic instability. This book contributes to the
rediscovery of Beirut by inviting the visitor and reader to explore
a city that is unique in the region for its multicultural heritage,
where antiquity jostles with Ottoman and French colonial influence
as well as with striking expressions of modernity. The history of
Beirut, as with so many other cities, is multi-layered; but this is
exceptionally conspicuous in the cultural, denominational and
economic diversity of its neighbourhoods. These are best
investigated slowly and on foot, a strategy both practicable and
pleasurable despite a tyrannical car culture. Between 2019 and
2021, in the aftermath of the explosion, Beatrice Teissier walked
through the city's streets and recorded her impressions as a record
of Beirut's architectural fabric and turbulent recent history.
Beirut: Scarred City offers twelve itineraries in parts of west,
central and east Beirut, with a foray south, which take the reader
to easily accessible areas of the city. From crumbling mansions to
brutalist high-rises, from seascapes to inner-city parks and
cemeteries, from ancient ruins to the latest reconstruction, from
graffiti to international street art and contemporary art
galleries, each area tells its story. The present crisis is not
avoided, and the author discusses Lebanon's economic crisis, the
political problems that have beset the city since the civil war and
the controversies surrounding reconstruction. References to
contemporary Arab literature on Beirut and, more personally,
private insights and conversations give voice to the spirit of the
city and to the resilience and creativity of its citizens.
The adventurer and artist John Castle, of mixed British and
Prussian descent, was one of several foreigners commissioned by the
Russian Empire to take part in the Orenburg Expedition which
started in 1734. Its aims were to secure and encircle Bashkiria, to
the north of present-day western Kazakhstan. The Russians planned
to establish a line of forts, a trading base and centre for
overseeing the Kazakhs at Orenburg at the junction of the Or and
Ural (Jaik) rivers and to investigate the natural resources of the
region. The Expedition attracted numerous merchants, surveyors and
curious travellers. Castle volunteered to visit Khan Abulkhayir of
the Lesser Kazakh Horde and to negotiate with him on behalf of the
Russians. At the time Abulkhayir had been compelled, against the
will of his people, to swear an oath of allegiance to Russia, and
the situation with the Kazakhs remained volatile. Castle set off
into virtually uncharted territory in the midst of chaos due to a
major Bashkir rebellion prompted by the Orenburg Expedition. During
his two-month journey he recorded his impressions of places, people
and customs. Castle's diary describes this dangerous journey,
subsequent events and his return to safety. It provides information
on the tense political dynamics of the time, on the ethnography,
geography and natural resources of Kazakhstan and on the difficult
interactions between foreign members of the Expedition and Russian
officials. The diary's rich ethnographic content, which includes
first-hand observations of exorcism and divination rituals and the
local administration of justice, gives clear - and for its time
extremely rare - insights into the combined use of customary Kazakh
steppe practices and Islam. It is a major historiographical source
because it is written from the point of view of a foreigner and not
a Russian. This book is the first English translation (by Sarah
Tolley) and edition of John Castle's Journal von der AO 1736 aus
Orenburg zu dem Abul Geier Chan der Kirgis-Kaysak Tartarichen Horda
- , Riga 1784 (Journal of a Journey undertaken in AO 1736 from
Orenburg to Abul Geier, Khan of the Kirgis Caysak Horde - ). It
reproduces the diary in full, with its glossary and 13 plates.
These include unique illustrations of the Khan, his yurt and life
on the steppe. An introduction provides the context of the
Expedition, and footnotes accompany the text giving further
clarifications and explanations.
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