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Southern Arabia
Mabel Bent, Theodore Bent
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R982
Discovery Miles 9 820
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Southern Arabia
Mabel Bent, Theodore Bent
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R755
Discovery Miles 7 550
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"At last we reached a circular enclosure among the grass and scanty
trees. We rushed in and it was like getting into a tropical
greenhouse with the roof off. There were tall trees and long
creepers making monkey ropes, large flowers hanging, great cactus
trees, aloes and all sorts of beautiful things crowded together, so
that one could hardly squeeze through. I should have liked to stop
and stare at the vegetation but on we rushed, over walls and to the
tower we had heard of, which is close to the outer wall. We did not
stay even to walk round the tower but out we rushed again, like
people who were taking a stolen look into an enchanted garden and
were afraid of being bewitched if we remained... It was quite dark
and we had to be guided by shouts to our camp and got home in a
state of great wonder and delight and hope of profitable work and
full assurance of the great antiquity of the ruins. Theodore was
not very well and had to take quinine." [M.V.A. Bent, 4 June 1891]
Thus a few lines from Mabel (Mrs J. Theodore) Bent's 1891 African
travel diary on her arrival at 'Great Zimbabwe' (in present-day
Zimbabwe), written for her family, serve to evoke the romance and
hardships of colonial exploration for a Victorian audience. Of
particular importance are Mabel's previously unpublished notebooks
covering the couple's arduous wagon trek to these famous ruins, in
part sponsored by the ambitious Cecil Rhodes. Theodore Bent's
interpretations of these wonderful monuments sparked a controversy
(one of several this maverick archaeologist was involved in over
his short career) that still divides scholars today. Mabel Bent was
probably the first woman to visit there and help document this
major site. As tourists in Egypt and explorers in the Sudan,
Ethiopia, and Southern Africa, anyone interested in 19th-century
travel will want to follow the wagon tracks and horse trails of the
Bents across hundreds of miles of untouched African landscape.
Contents: Personal diaries, travel accounts and letters relating to
the Bents' travels and explorations in: Egypt (1885); Zimbabwe
(1891); Ethiopia (1893); Sudan (1896); Egypt (1898). Includes
extended contributions on the archaeological background to 'Great
Zimbabwe' by Innocent Pikirayi, and 'The Stone Birds of Great
Zimbabwe' by William J. Dewey. Additional documents, maps, and
Mabel Bent's own photographs contribute to this important insight
into the lives of two of the great British travellers of the
nineteenth century. The Travel Chronicles of Mrs J. Theodore Bent.
Mabel Bent's diaries of 1883-1898, from the archive of the Joint
Library of the Hellenic and Roman Societies, London. Published in
three volumes: Volume I - Greece and the Levantine Littoral (2006);
Volume II: The African Journeys (2012); Vol III - Southern Arabia
and Persia (2010). "...Brisch and Archaeopress have done a major
service by reproducing these hidden gems and rescuing Mabel Bent
from relative obscurity. This collection is a valuable primary
source and will be of immense interest to those interested in
female travelogues, historical archaeology, or the daily
experiences of European women in colonial Africa." (Reviewed in
'Journal of African History', Vol. 55/2, 2014, 296-298)
"If my fellow-traveller had lived, he intended to have put together
in book form such information as we had gathered about Southern
Arabia. Now, as he died four days after our return from our last
journey there, I have had to undertake the task myself. It has been
very sad to me, but I have been helped by knowing that, however
imperfect this book may be, what is written here will surely be a
help to those who, by following in our footsteps, will be able to
get beyond them, and to whom I so heartily wish success and a Happy
Home-coming, the best wish a traveller may have." So Mabel Bent
(Mrs J. Theodore Bent) begins her Preface to Southern Arabia, one
of the classic travel books written in English about this
ever-fascinating region, in which she details the couple's travels
over a ten-year period. A testimony to the book's high regard is
that, since publication in 1900, it has rarely been out-of-print.
Mabel Bent continues in her Preface to inform the reader that her
volume is drawn in part from the note-books of her husband, her
fellow-traveller, the redoubtable J. Theodore Bent (1852-97), and
also "...from the 'Chronicles' that I always wrote during our
journeys". After more than a hundred years, and for the first time,
these personal Chronicles on 'South Arabia' are published in World
Enough, and Time: The Chronicles of Mabel Bent. Vol. III and are of
significant interest to Arabists and those enthusiasts who will
want to have Mabel's on-the-spot account of their adventures and
archaeological and ethnographical discoveries. Also included in
this present volume is Mabel Bent's previously unpublished
Chronicle of their long journey through Persia, from south to north
in 1889. Contents: Bahrein and Persia, 1889: The Hadhramaut,
1893-5; Socotra and the lands of the Fadhli and Yafai, 1896-7.
Personal letters, documents, maps, and Mabel Bent's own photographs
contribute to this important insight into the lives of two of the
great British travellers of the nineteenth century.
"Then we went to the other bath. Here I found I was being again
taken to the men's place, so I said, 'I'm not going in here'. But a
great outcry was raised and loud exclamations of invitation and
constant assurances that there was nobody naked, so when T said
fiercely, 'Come in and don't make a fuss. They all wish it', I
entered a large hall with the raised divans peopled by gentry in
cloaks and turbans of towels. There was fortunately no one in the
hot bath as it deserved a careful examination. The wide platform
round the tanks was inlaid with beautiful marbles and there were
recesses with pumps, etc., also inlaid..." (Bursa, February 1888)On
August 2nd 1877, the English explorer and archaeologist James
Theodore Bent married an extraordinary Irishwoman, Mabel Virginia
Anna Hall-Dare, the second of the four daughters born to Mr Robert
Westley Hall-Dare of Co. Wexford and Essex. Mabel was 31, Theodore
25, and within a few months they had embarked on their pattern of
annual travels that continued until his early death in 1897. Their
trips began fairly close to home, visiting northern Italy, but by
1883 they were in the Eastern Mediterranean (in modern Greece and
Turkey), searching out the antiquities, landscapes and lifestyles
of a region that was to captivate them for the next fifteen years.
Their researches led to a number of highly regarded monographs,
papers and articles (such as Theodore's 'The Cyclades, or Life
Among the Insular Greeks', 1885, and the many publications of their
various discoveries in locations such as 'Rugged Cilicia', the
island of Thassos, and elsewhere) that were to place the couple
securely amongst the foremost British travellers of the latter half
of the 19th century.The publication, therefore, of Mabel Bent's
personal notebooks from the archive of the Joint Library of the
Hellenic and Roman Societies, London, represents the discovery of a
lost and notable milestone for scholars and travel enthusiasts of
all kinds. This series of volumes begins with Mabel's account of
the couple's adventures around the Aegean and beyond, extracted
from her fifteen-year sequence of notebooks and presented
chronologically. Specifically, we follow Mabel and Theodore to the
Greek mainland and the islands known now as the Cyclades and the
Dodecanese, as well as the northern Aegean islands; their journeys
along the Turkish littoral lead them from bustling Istanbul to
provincial Mersin in the far south-west. Contents include: Chapter
1) 1883-1884: The Cyclades - Mabel's own accounts of the couple's
two tours of the Cyclades. Theodore relied on these Chronicles for
the writing up of his classic travelogue 'The Cyclades; or Life
Among the Insular Greeks' of 1885; Chapter 2) 1885: The Dodecanese
- including Rhodes, Tilos and Karpathos; Chapter 3) 1886: The
Eastern Aegean - including Samos, Patmos, Kalymnos and Astypalea;
Chapter 4) 1887: The Northern Aegean - including Meteora,
Thessaloniki, Thassos and Samothraki; Chapter 5) 1888: The Turkish
Coast - from Istanbul to Kastellorizo; Chapter 6) 1890: 'Rough
Cilicia' - extensive explorations around south-west Turkey.
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