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BAKER, Sir Samuel White [1821-1893].
Ismailia: A Narrative Of The Expedition To Central Africa For The Suppression Of The Slave Trade. Organized By Ismail, Khedive Of Egypt.
New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1875..
8vo. pp. 2 p.l., [11]-542. 2 partly coloured maps (1 folding), engraved frontis. portrait, & 53 wood-engraved plates. original gilt-stamped pictorial cloth (small stain on front cover, large stain on rear cover, extremities frayed). First American Edition. In 1869, Baker became the first Englishman to undertake high office under the Egyptian government when he was appointed by the Khedive Ismail governor-general of the Equatorial Nile basin for a term of four years, with the rank of pacha and major-general in the Ottoman army. His major tasks were the subjection to Egyptian authority of the countries south of Gondokoro, the suppression of the slave-trade and the opening up of the region to regular trade and commerce. cfBlackmer 66. Ibrahim-Hilmy I 49.
$275 USD Book Number: elala3332 Order / Enquire
BARNES, J.A.
Politics In A Changing Society: A Political History Of The Fort Jameson Ngoni.
London...: Geoffrey Cumberlege, Oxford University Press, for the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, 1954..
8vo. pp. 1 p.l., x, 220. frontis. & 11 illus. on 3 folding plates. folding chart. maps in text. biblio. index. cloth. Very good copy. First Edition.
$75 USD Book Number: dola849 Order / Enquire
BARTH, Heinrich [1821-1865].
Reiser og Opdagesser I Nord= og Mellem=Afrika.
Copenhagen: Fr. Woldikes, 1860..
2 Volumes in 1. 8vo. pp. 4 p.l., 500; 3 p.l., 434. engraved frontis. portrait, folding lithographed map, 8 lithographed plates (incl. folding plan), & 71 wood-engravings in the text. inserted mounted photograph of 4 bare-breasted native women. contemporary half sheep (spine & corners scratched & worn, moderate foxing throughout - heavier on frontis. & titles, library rubberstamp on first title, second title backed). First Edition of the Danish Translation, abridged, of Barth's account of his travels in north and central Africa, 1850-55 (first published simultaneously in English and German in 5 Volumes, 1857-58). '.one of the most fruitful expeditions ever undertaken in inner Africa. In addition to journeys across the Sahara, Barth traversed the country from Lake Chad and Bagirmi on the east to Timbuktu on the west and Cameroon on the south, making prolonged sojourns in the ancient sultanates or emirates of Bornu, Kano, Nupe, Sokoto and Gando and at Timbuktu. He studied minutely the topography, history, civilizations and resources of the countries he visited.For accuracy, interest, variety and extent of information Barth's Travels have few rivals among works of the kind. It is a book that will always rank as a standard authority on the regions in question.'. (Encyc. Britan., 11th Edn.) cfIbrahim-Hilmy I 53-54.
$461 USD Book Number: ARTisBAR76 Order / Enquire
BECKWITH, Carol & FISHER, Angela.
African Ceremonies.
[New York]: Harry N. Abrams , Inc., [1999]..
2 volumes. folios. pp. 384; 360. colour illus. throughout. biblio. index. cloth. slipcase. First Edition.
$231 USD Book Number: ABE-277435 Order / Enquire
BERQUE, Jacques.
Egypt Imperialism & Revolution...Translated by Jean Stewart.
New York & Washington: Praeger Publishers, [1972]..
8vo. pp. 736. index. cloth. dw. Very good copy. First American Edition.
$75 USD Book Number: dola717 Order / Enquire
BERZOCK, Kathleen Bickford.
For Hearth And Altar: African Ceramics From The Keith Archepohl Collection.
Chicago: The Art Institute of Chicago & New Haven & London: Yale University Press, [2005]..
4to. pp. 203. profusely illus. (most colour). cloth. dw. (scratches on rear dw. else very good). First Edition. Published in conjunction with an exhibition.
$125 USD Book Number: dola2118 Order / Enquire
BOVILL, E.W. (Editor).
Missions To The Niger. Volume I The Journal Of Friedrich Hornemann's Travels From Cairo To Murzuk In The Years 1797-98. The Letters Of Major Alexander Gordon Laing 1824-26. [Volumes II-III: .The Bornu Mission, 1822-25.].
Cambridge: Published for the Hakluyt Society At The University Press [Second Series: Nos. 123, 128, 129 & 130], 1964-66..
4 Volumes. 8vo. pp. xi, [1 leaf], 406; xiv, 306; xii, [1 leaf], [309]-595x, [1 leaf], [599]-798. with half-titles. 37 plates (incl. 4 frontis. portraits), & 24 maps & charts (12 folding -1 in rear pocket), 4 full-page in the text). several text illus. (incl. 1 plan). with half-titles. original blind & gilt-stamped cloth. Vols. II-IV with Dw. (small stain to lower spine of Vol. I).
$350 USD Book Number: AVIssBOV44 Order / Enquire
BREASTED, James Henry [1865-1935].
A History Of Egypt From The Earliest Times To The Persian Conquest.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, [1931]..
8vo. pp. xxix, [1 leaf], 634.13 maps & plans (1 colour folding).186 plates & text illlus. (incl. colour frontis.). index. original gilt-stamped decorative cloth. Second Edition, Fully Revised.
$200 USD Book Number: elala3620 Order / Enquire
BROWN, William Harvey [1862-1913].
On The South African Frontier The Adventures And Observations Of An American In Mashonaland And Matabeleland.
London: Sampson Low, Marston, & Company, 1899..
8vo. pp. xxii, [1 leaf], 430. with half-title. 2 folding coloured maps & 32 plates (incl. frontis.). tipped-in facsimile letter. original gilt-lettered cloth, t.e.g. (cloth slightly discoloured & trifle frayed at extremities, neat gilt institutional crest on upper cover, erased stamp on title, faint foxing to some plates & neighbouring leaves). First London Edition. "This book is a narrative of the author's experiences and observations, partly as naturalist of an expedition sent by the U.S. Government in 1899 to the west coast of Africa, but mainly as collector, big game hunter, gold seeker, landowner, citizen, and soldier during seven years' participation in the settlement and early development of Rhodesia. " (Preface) Brown joined Cecil Rhodes' pioneer expedition to Matabeleland in 1891, and fought in the Matabele and Mashona uprisings. His sporting adventures included hunting for antelope, hippopotamus, rhinoceros, buffalo, and lion. Inserted at the front is a facsimile letter from Cecil Rhodes attesting to the truthfulness of Brown's narrative. Mendelssohn I p. 308. Czech p. 24. Hosken p. 28. cfSmith B142.
$256 USD Book Number: AOWTBROW43 Order / Enquire
BRUCE, James [1730-1794].
Travels To Discover The Source Of The Nile, In The Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, And 1773.
Edinburgh: Printed by J.Ruthven for G.G.J. and J.Robinson, London, 1790.
5 Volumes. 4to. pp. 6 p.l., lxxxiii, 535; 2 p.l., viii, 718; 2 p.l., viii, 759; 2 p.l., viii, 695; 2 p.l., xiv, 230, [9]index, [1]errata. complete with half-titles but lacking plate list. 3 large folding engraved maps, 58 engraved plates of animals, birds, plants, battle plans (each with leaf of explanation opposite), & 4 leaves of Ethiopic script. engraved title vignettes & headpiece. contemporary sprinkled calf, rebacked, corners renewed (some scarring to covers, some offsetting from plates, 1 map foxed otherwise the foxing is minor & infrequent, 1 spine label renewed, a few short marginal tears). Exlibris of explorer & author Wilfred Thesiger. First Edition. Bruce spent five years (1768-73) travelling extensively in upper Egypt and Abyssinia, and reached the source of the Blue Nile, following it to its confluence with the White Nile. His history and description of Abyssinia are particularly valuable, as the country had been visited only once by a European (Poncet) in the previous one hundred and fifty years. Bruce immediately won the respect and admiration of the Abyssinians on account of his imposing physical appearance and manner, his courage, knowledge of Geez, and horsemanship, as well as his acquired skill in medicine, which allowed him to save some members of the royal family of Abyssinia from smallpox. His narrative also contains sections on the history and religion of Egypt, Indian trade, the invention of the alphabet, and an appendix (Volume V), entitled Select Specimens of Natural History, describing and illustrating various plants, birds, animals, and insects, including the rhinoceros, hyaena, fennec, and lynx. All of the maps and plates of natural history subjects, artifacts, antiquities, and monuments are based on Bruce's own drawings and those of his companion, Italian draughtsman, Luigi Balugani. Bruce believed he had discovered the source of the true Nile when he reached the springs of the Blue Nile in 1770. "He had not reached the source of the true Nile, but only that of its considerable tributary. He was also in error.in regarding himself as the first European who had reached these fountains.There is a sense, however, in which Bruce may be more justly esteemed the discoverer of the fount of the Blue Nile than Paez, who stumbled upon it by accident, and, absorbed by missionary zeal, thought little of the exploit to which Bruce had dedicated his life." (DNB) The fame and interest of Bruce's travels are due in part to the vivid and robust style in which his narrative is written: "He will always remain the poet, and his work the epic, of African travel." (DNB) Blackmer 221. Brunet I 1283. Cox I 388-89. Gay 44. Ibrahim-Hilmy I 91. Nissen, ZBI, 617. cfMendelssohn I 311.
$9990 USD | Book Number: elala1613 | Order / Enquire |
BRYANT, Jacob [1715-1804].
Observations And Inquiries Relating To Various Parts Of Ancient History; Containing Dissertations On The Wind Euroclydon, And On The Island Melite, Together With An Account Of Egypt In Its Most Early States.
Cambridge: Printed by J.Archdeacon, Sold by T. & J.Merrill and T.Payne, 1767..
4to. pp. 8 p.l., 324, [1 leaf]errata. 6 folding engraved maps, 1 engraved plate, & 1 engraving in the text. contemporary mottled calf, gilt back (head of spine worn, joints partly cracked, some light foxing). from the Signet Library, with gilt crests on sides. First Edition. The English antiquary's first work, in which he attacked the opinions of Bochart, Beza, Grotius, Bentley, and others. The first tract concerns the wind mentioned by St. Luke under the name of Euroclydon. The second is a dissertation on the two islands, Melite Illyrica, and Melita Africana, in which Bryant attempts to prove that the former was the island on which the apostle St. Paul was shipwrecked. The last and longest tract is an historical-geographical treatise on ancient Egypt, in which Bryant situates and describes Goshen, Zoan, Onium, Heliopolis, &c. Cox I 230. Blackmer 226. Ibrahim-Hilmy I 102.
$1217 USD Book Number: AYAseBRY35 Order / Enquire
BRYDEN, H[enry] A[nderson] [1854-1937].
Nature And Sport In South Africa.
London:Chapman And Hall, 1897..
8vo. pp. xvi, 314. frontis. with half-title & tipped-in notice to subscribers. untrimmed in original gilt-stamped cloth with printed slip of Mudie's Select Library on front cover, top edge gilt (endpapers renewed). ownership entry of Canadian author Thomas Conant [1842-1905]. First Edition. Mendelssohn I 319.
$256 USD Book Number: AYDtuBRY72 Order / Enquire
BUCHSER, Frank.
Ritt Ins Dunkle Marokko Tagebuch seiner ersten marokkanischen Reise 1858.Eingeleitet und herausgegeben von Gottfried Wälchli.
Aarau & Leipzig: Verlag H.R. Sauerländer & Co., [1937]..
8vo. pp. 247, [1]. 19 plates, 1 tipped-in facsimile letter, & 1 map. cloth (covers bit bowed, institutional bookplate). dw. (spine yellowed, extremities chipped).
$61 USD Book Number: TCHttBUC42 Order / Enquire
BUNBURY, Charles J[ames] F[ox] [1809-1886].
Journal Of A Residence At The Cape Of Good Hope; With Excursions into the Interior, and Notes on the Natural History, and the Native Tribes.
London: John Murray, 1848..
12mo. pp. xii, 297, [3]ads. 5 wood-engraved plates (incl. frontis.). Fine copy in original blind & gilt-stamped cloth (plates lightly foxed). Inscription on half-title: "To Miss Emily Osborne with the love of the Wife of the Author, June 1879". First Edition. "Mr. (afterwards Sir Charles) Bunbury accompanied his friend, Sir George Napier, the Governor of the Cape Colony, on his voyage to Africa in 1837, and remained there for fourteen months, during which time he busied himself with botanical research, travelling over a considerable part of South Africa. In the course of his journeys he had ample opportunity of observing the political state of the country, and refers to the necessity for a firm and consistent policy.He refers to the Great Trek of the Boers which was still proceeding, and enters into the reasons for this step." (Mendelssohn) Mendelssohn I 328.
$564 USD Book Number: ANBurBUN83 Order / Enquire
BURCHELL, William John [1781-1863].
Travels In The Interior Of Southern Africa.
London: Printed For Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, And Brown, 1822-24.
2 Volumes. pp. 1 p.l., [v]-viii, [8], 582; 3 p.l., 648. complete with errata slip but lacking half-titles. Hints on Emigration bound at the beginning of the first volume. large folding engraved map & 20 hand-coloured aquatint plates (5 folding). 96 wood-engravings in the text. full modern dark blue morocco (occasional minor offsetting or light foxing, short tear in map fold - no loss). First edition. "The most valuable and accurate work on South Africa published up to the first quarter of the nineteenth century, and embracing a description of a large part of the Cape Colony and Bechuanaland at this period. Theal ('History of South Africa, 1795-1834') remarks that the author was 'a man of talent, an easy writer, and scrupulously exact in his descriptions', and according to Sclater he was 'a most skillful and well-trained zoologist and botanist, and his observations are all accurate and methodical.' Burchell penetrated as far as 'Lattakoo' (afterwards known as Kuruman), and during his explorations, which extended over a period of four years, made important collections of the fauna, flora, and curiosities of the country, together with a large number of drawings. Generally speaking, Burchell appears to have been favourably impressed by the Boers.The author's name is perpetuated in the country by the appellation of 'Burchell's Zebra' (equus burchelli), a species of quagga discovered by him 'in the country immediately to the north of the Orange River.he was also the first to mention the existence of asbestos in this part of the country. The illustrations in the volumes are characterized by great beauty and accuracy, and it is stated in the Preface that, 'in order to ensure greater correctness in the vignettes, the author has made all these drawings upon the blocks themselves'; the coloured plates are particularly admired, and the drawings from which they were engraved were prepared with great care by the artist, and were untouched by any other hand. The work is now extremely scarce, many copies having been broken up in the middle of the nineteenth century for the plates." (Mendelssohn) Some of the panoramic views were executed on the then practically unknown principle of scenographic projection on the surface of a revolving cylinder. The work covers Burchell's explorations in 1811 and 1812. A third volume relating his travels from 1812 to 1815 was projected but never published. In all Burchell claimed that his African collections consisted of 63,000 natural objects, 500 drawings, and a mass of astronomical, meteorological, and other observations and notes. A selection of his specimens were presented to the British museum following his return and are now in South Kensington. Abbey, Travel, 327. Mendelssohn I p. 224. Prideaux pp. 239 & 329. Tooley 116.
$9000 USD | Book Number: elala3751 | Order / Enquire |
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