Cities, Citadels, and Sights of the Near East: Francis Bedford's Nineteenth-Century Photographs of Egypt, the Levant, and Constantinople

Cities, Citadels, and Sights of the Near East: Francis Bedford's Nineteenth-Century Photographs of Egypt, the Levant, and Constantinople

Sophie Gordon, Badr El Hage
Our Price:  £6.99
List Price:  £24.99
Saving Of:  72%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Sophie Gordon, Badr El Hage
Condition:  New
Format:  Paperback
Pages:  160
Publisher:  The American University in Cairo Press
Year:  2014
ISBN:  9789774166709

In 1862, the Prince of Wales, eldest son of Britain's Queen Victoria, embarked on a grand tour of the Middle East, for his education and enlightenment. Accompanying the royal party was Francis Bedford, an accomplished practitioner of the still young art of photography, charged with taking views of the cities and historic places visited on the tour for the royal album. The result is an extraordinary collection of some of the best early photographs of Cairo and the temples of Upper Egypt, Jerusalem and the Holy Land, Lebanon and Damascus, Izmir and Constantinople. From timeless views of the Pyramids, the Dome of the Rock, Baalbek, and Hagia Sophia to scenes from another age of the streets of Cairo or tall ships on the Bosphorus, 120 of Bedford's most outstanding photographs are showcased here in this fascinating visual tour of ancient lands in royal company.

You may also like
London's District Railway: Nineteenth Century
Mike Horne
Condition: Used, Like New
£30.00   £19.99

The Discovery of Albania: Travel Writing and Anthropology in the Nineteenth Century Balkans
Johann George von Hahn
Condition: New
£110.00   £7.99

Classic accounts of Albania in the 19th century.


The European Metropolis: Paris and Nineteenth-Century Irish Women Novelists
Matthew Reznicek
Condition: New
£25.00

Building on the long-standing image of Paris as the "Capital of the Nineteenth Century" and the "Capital of Modernity," this book examines the city's place in the imagination of Irish women writers in the long nineteenth century. By reasserting the centrality of Paris, this book drawsconnections between ...