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Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile by SPEKE, JOHN HANNING
Price:
$400.00
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Book desription: New York: Harper & Brothers. Very Good. 1864. Hard Cover. 'With map and portraits, and numerous illustrations, chiefly from drawings by Captain Grant.' xxx,590 pages, [6 advertising] pages, very well illustrated, 2 maps (1 folding), original boards, new cloth backstrip, repaired tear in folding map. 1st American edition. This is a very nice copy, the contents are near fine, excepting the tear in the folding map. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "John Hanning Speke (May 4, 1827 - September 15, 1864) was an officer in the British Indian army, who made three voyages of exploration to Africa. He also created the Hamitic hypothesis, a suspected major cause of the Rwandan genocide. In 1854 he made his first voyage, joining the already famous Richard Francis Burton on an expedition to Somalia. Despite hardships, the two managed to reach the 'forbidden city' Harar. In 1856, Burton was asked to make a voyage to East Africa, to find the sources of the Nile. He again chose Speke as his companion. The two travelled inland from Zanzibar and discovered Lake Tanganyika. They heard of a second lake in the area, but Burton was too sick to make the voyage. Speke thus went alone, and found the lake, which he christened Lake Victoria. Speke returned to England before Burton, and made their voyage famous. Burton was embittered, because Speke declared Lake Victoria to be the Nile's source, whereas Burton believed Lake Tanganyika to be so, and because Speke had by then already been chosen to lead an expedition to further clarify the issue. Together with James Augustus Grant, Speke left from Zanzibar in October 1860. They travelled on the west side around Lake Victoria without actually seeing much of it, but on the north side of the lake, Speke found the Nile flowing out of it and discovered the Rippon Falls. Next he travelled to Gondokoro in southern Sudan, where he met Samuel Baker, then back to England. Speke's voyage did not resolve the issue, Burton claimed that because Speke had not followed the Nile from the place it flowed out of Lake Victoria to Gondokoro, he could not be sure they were the same river. A debate was planned between the two on September 16, 1864, but Speke died just one day before, of a hunting accident - although Burton and some others believed it might actually have been suicide." From the Introduction: "I profess accurately to describe naked Africa - Africa in those places where it has not received the slightest impulse, whether for good or for evil, from European civilization. If the picture be a dark one, we should, when contemplating these sons of Noah, try and carry our mind back to that time when our poor elder brother Ham was cursed by his father, and condemned to be the slave of both Shem and Japheth; for as they were then, so they appear to be now - a strikingly existing proof of the Holy Scriptures." .
- Bookseller: Military History Bookshop
(US)
- Bookseller Inventory #: 18758
- Format/binding: Hard Cover
- Book condition: Very Good
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Harper & Brothers
- Place: New York
- Date published: 1864
- Keywords: JOHN, HANNING, SPEKE, EGYPT, EXPLORATION, ARCHAEOLOGY, NILE, RIVER, FR6-6
- Subjects:
TRAVEL / General;
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