Syria: The Desert and the Sown

Syria: The Desert and the Sown
“To those bred under an elaborate social order few such moments of exhilaration can come as that which stands at the threshold of wild travel.” The opening line of this book (first published in 1907) sums up Gertrude Bell, well known for her turn-of-the-20th-century exploits in the Middle East when aristocratic young women just didn’t do such things. Recognized for her role of border-maker in the region after World War I, this re-release recounts Bell’s ambitious 1905 expedition through Palestine and Syria with a small entourage of native guards, guides and a cook, showcasing the Oxford-educated woman’s talent as a classic Victorian travel writer. Fluent in Turkish and Arabic, she provides wonderfully entertaining snapshots of conversation with the tribes she encounters, and an early passion for archeology becomes clear in her site descriptions and photographs. She displays a formidable knowledge of Ottoman politics, on the status of groups like the Circassians, the Druze, the Armenians and the Yazidis, for example, which served her well for a later stint in British intelligence. Though often reflecting patronizing colonial attitudes of the time, her writing takes the reader on an unforgettable trip through the remote Middle East before airplanes and cars changed the scene.
Syria: The Desert and the Sown
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