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Publisher: Oxford Clarendon Press Publication date: 1914 Subjects:
Mahayana Buddhism Gods, Buddhist Notes: This is an OCR reprint.
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Piccadilly (Hardcover)
Laurence Oliphant
bundle available
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R1,256
Discovery Miles 12 560
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Haifa (Hardcover)
Laurence Oliphant
bundle available
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R1,662
Discovery Miles 16 620
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In 1857 Laurence Oliphant (1829-88), lawyer, journalist, diplomat,
and sometime spy, later Liberal MP, satirical novelist, and, for a
time, adherent of the religious mystic Thomas Harris, became
private secretary to Lord Elgin (1811-63), accompanying him to
China, and thence to Japan, on a mission to protect and extend
British trading interests in the region. Oliphant's 1859 account of
the trip was published in two volumes. Volume 1 deals with the
events of the Second Opium War, from the 'Arrow Incident',
discussed in retrospect, to the Treaty of Tientsin, as well as an
early diversion to India to suppress the Mutiny. The work is a
mixture of travel narrative - Oliphant had previously written about
his travels in the Crimea (also reissued in this series) - and
political analysis. It provides both an informative account of the
war from a privileged vantage point and a window upon Oliphant's
colourful career.
In 1857 Laurence Oliphant (1829-88), lawyer, journalist, diplomat
and sometime spy, later Liberal MP, satirical novelist, and, for a
time, adherent of the religious mystic Thomas Harris, became
private secretary to Lord Elgin (1811-63), accompanying him to
China, and thence to Japan, on a mission to protect and extend
British trading interests in the region. Oliphant's 1859 account of
the trip was published in two volumes. Volume 2 deals with the
negotiation of the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Yedo, the legalisation
of the Chinese opium trade and combat with Chinese insurgents at
Nankin. The work is a mixture of travel narrative - Oliphant had
previously written about his travels in Nepal and in the Crimea
(also reissued in this series) - and political analysis. It
provides both an informative account of the war from a privileged
vantage point and a window upon Oliphant's own colourful career.
The British diplomat and writer Laurence Oliphant (1829 88) was the
author of travel diaries and novels, including the very successful
Piccadilly (1870). A keen traveller, he worked as a correspondent
for The Times during the Franco-Prussian War (1870 1) and served as
Secretary to British Diplomat Lord Elgin in Canada, China and
Japan. This book is a narrative of the journey Oliphant made to
Russia as a young man, with his friend Oswald Smith. Its
publication in 1853 coincided with the beginning of the Crimean
War, turning the book into an immediate success. From the splendour
of mid-nineteenth-century St Petersburg, to the annexation of the
Crimea, and the international consequences of Russian foreign
policy for Europe, this illustrated book is also full of witty
anecdotes and captivating descriptions. Very influential in its
time, it remains an important resource for cultural and political
historians.
Laurence Oliphant (1829 88) was a much-travelled British diplomat
and writer. In the mid-nineteenth century, between two stints in
the Caucasus, he spent several years in North America, helped Lord
Elgin negotiate a trade treaty between Canada and the US, and was
for a time Superintendent-General for Indian Affairs in Canada. In
this book, first published in 1855, Oliphant expresses his
enthusiasm for the rapid development in the American West that was
being driven by industry and commerce. He documents a fact-finding
journey around the Great Lakes region, travelling on the new
railway and adventurously taking a bark canoe down rapids and
across portages. From picnics, dances and sleigh rides to mining,
forest clearance and land speculation, Oliphant conveys a vivid
picture of the opportunities and hardships of the frontier society.
He focuses in detail on the Native Americans he encountered, their
customs, skills, way of life and future prospects.
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