Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshghar (Formerly Chinese Tartary). Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshghar (Formerly Chinese Tartary).

Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshghar (Formerly Chinese Tartary)‪.‬

And Return Journey over the Karakoram Pass.

    • £4.99
    • £4.99

Publisher Description

Replica of 1871 edition by John Murray, London.

Oversize maps are available as a free download. 

With illustrations.


The captivating travel narrative chronicling the author’s journey through Central Asia.

Robert Shaw, the author of this work was an unlikely explorer, struck down by rheumatic fever after university and forced to tame his desire for adventure by settling down as a tea-planter in the Himalayas. Yet “an adventurous spirit, stimulated by study and unabated by the delicacy of his constitution, inspired him with a desire to penetrate the then almost unknown country north of the Karakoram; and, after one or two tentative excursions, he started in May 1868 for Eastern Turkestan, traveling as a merchant, but taking with him, besides such goods as seemed likely to find purchasers in Central Asia, a prismatic compass and Rawlinson’s Herodotus. He reached Yarkund on 8 Dec., Kashgar on 11 Jan. 1869; being the first Englishman to visit those places. At Kashgar, though not allowed to enter the city, he was treated with marked civility by Yakub Beg, the ruler of the country who, mainly in consequence of the advice given him by Shaw, despatched an envoy to India asking that a British officer might be sent to arrange a treaty. Shaw returned by the Karakoram Pass, and proceeded to England. While preparing an account of his journey for the press, he heard that Lord Mayo had decided to send an official mission to Eastern Turkestan. He at once telegraphed an offer of his services, which being accepted, he accompanied Mr. (afterward Sir Douglas) Forsyth on his first mission. Yakub Beg, when they arrived at Yarkun (3 Aug. 1870), was in another part of his dominions, and the mission came back with its principal object unachieved. Shaw returned to England where in 1872 the Royal Geographical Society awarded him the patron’s gold medal, Sir Henry Rawlinson stating that this distinction was given him ‘for the services he had rendered to the cause of geography in exploring Eastern Turkestan; and above all for his very valuable astronomical observations’” (DNB) This is Shaw’s finest work on his adventures in Eurasia.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2012
12 October
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
525
Pages
PUBLISHER
Adegi Graphics LLC
SIZE
8.5
MB

More Books Like This

Syria: The Desert and the Sown Syria: The Desert and the Sown
2021
Syria - The Desert and The Sown [Illustrated Edition] Syria - The Desert and The Sown [Illustrated Edition]
2022
Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah & Meccah Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah & Meccah
2022
The Desert and the Sown The Desert and the Sown
2012
Alarms and Excursions In Arabia (1931) Alarms and Excursions In Arabia (1931)
2013
The Road to Oxiana The Road to Oxiana
2019

More Books by Robert Shaw

An Exposition of the Westminster Confession of Faith An Exposition of the Westminster Confession of Faith
2022
The Reformed Faith The Reformed Faith
2011
The Embodied Psychotherapist The Embodied Psychotherapist
2004
The Nocturnal City The Nocturnal City
2018
Perceiving, Acting and Knowing Perceiving, Acting and Knowing
2017
The Complete Leader The Complete Leader
2014