Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Eothen:

Traces of Travel Brought Home from the East
Front Cover
3 Reviews
Northwestern University Press, Apr 1, 1997 - Travel - 245 pages
"In the autumn of 1834, Alexander Kinglake and John Savile set out together for Turkey and the Levant. When Savile was summoned home Kinglake, accompanied only by his guide and interpreter, went on by ship to Cyprus and Beirut, then to the Holy Land, Cairo, and Damascus. On his own in a foreign world, Kinglake used the solitary travel for prolonged self-scrutiny, and ultimately for liberation. Eothen has the freshness of the immediate and the new. Kinglake kept it free of the details of geography, history, science, politics, religion, and statistics; it is far less about the countries and the cities he passes through that it is about himself. This is what makes Eothen a modern travel book, possibly the first and certainly one of the greatest of its kind."
  

What people are saying - Write a review

Review: Eothen

User Review  - Scott Harris - Goodreads

Reading Victorian travel journals is an exercise that requires some practice! While Kinglake's delight in his experiences has to be found somewhere beneath his cocky colonial attitude, not only toward ... Read full review

Review: Eothen: Traces of Travel Brought Home from the East

User Review  - S - Goodreads

"droll elegance" Read full review

Related books

Contents

1
23
Infidel Smyrna
37
Cyprus
55
Chapter IX
83
Chapter XII
97
The black tents
111
Chapter XVII
137
The desert
159
Chapter XIX
181
Chapter XXII
195
Chapter XXV
213
Chapter XXVII
227
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

References to this book

From other books

Fratricide in the Holy Land: A Psychoanalytic View of the Arab-Israeli Conflict

About the author (1997)

English historian Alexander Kinglake was born in Wilton House, near Taunton and was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. A tour of the Far East in 1840 resulted in the publication of Eothen (1844). Eothen is a Greek word meaning "from the early dawn" or "from the East." It consists of letters that Kinglake wrote home while making his extensive tour. He became the historian of the Crimea in 1863, writing the History of the War in the Crimea (1863-87), considered one of the finest historical works of the nineteenth century.

Kreiger teaches at Dartmouth College.

Bibliographic information