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Saddling the dogs

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In the absence of horses, saddle the dogs. This Arab proverb, suggesting the uncompromising determination of nomads to keep moving, whatever the obstacles, epitomizes also the travelling ethos of many early visitors to the 'exotic East'. The journeys examined here are linked by the light they shed on the experience of travel in Egypt, Greece and the Ottoman Balkans, and the Near East from the 17th to the early 20th century not so much what was seen as how one got there and how one got around once arrived; the vicissitudes and travails, both expected and strange that characterised the passage.

Title Saddling the dogs : journeys through Egypt and the Near East / edited by Diane Fortenberry and Deborah Manley.
Publisher Oxford, England
Oakville, Connecticut : Astene : Oxbow Books
Creation Date [2009]
Notes Description based upon print version of record.
English
Content Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Introduction
Death and Disorder in Muhammad Sadiq's Star of the Hajj: Steamships, Quarantine and their Impact on the Muslim Body
Modern Pilgrims in Egypt and the Holy Land: A Case Study
Facing Travels, Shaping Worlds: Three 17th-century Mesopotamian Travel Accounts
From Baghdad to Constantinople on Horseback: A Journey by Claudius and Mary Rich, October-December 1813
Pascal Coste and Eugène Flandin: Voyage en Perse
Khalil Aga: A Lost American on the Nile
An American Tourist in 1839: Philip Rhinelander Visits the Mediterranean
'The Contagion followed, and vanquish'd them': Plague, Travellers and LazarettosThe 6th Earl of Hopetoun Prepares for the Nile
The Tedious Camel
Travel Clubs in the Era of the First Czechoslovak Republic
Index
Extent 1 online resource (278 p.)
Language English
Copyright Date ©2009
National Library system number 997010715228105171
MARC RECORDS

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