The Storming of a large Storehouse near Ras al Khyma, where Capt. Dancey of H.M. 65th Regt was killed. Nov. 13th 1809.
£5,000 · Offered by Maggs Bros Ltd
A very good example of this rare and important aquatint of the British attack on Ras Al Khaimah. The print is from a series of aquatints after drawings by Richard Temple, titled Sixteen Views of Places in the Persian Gulph, Taken in the Years 1809-10 — a work widely regarded as the most desirable nineteenth-century publication on the Gulf, celebrated for its early depictions of the Arabian littoral. It is also prized as the first Western colour plate book to depict any part of the modern-day United Arab Emirates. Temple served as a private in Her Majesty’s 65th Regiment during the Persian Gulf Campaign of 1809, in which the East India Company (and Royal Navy) attacked the Qawasim at its bases along the Persian and Arabian coasts. The EIC and British establishment justified their actions as an attempt to suppress piracy, but this stance has been strongly challenged by revisionist historians. (See Lorimer’s Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Historical Section , pp.654-656, for an official British perspective on the expedition; and Sultan Muhammad Al Qasimi’s The Myth of Arab Piracy in the Persian Gulf, for a rebuttal of Lorimer’s stance on the Al Qasimi’s role in piracy.) The present print captures close-quarters fighting near Ras al-Khamiah, during a battle between British forces and the Qawasim on November the 13th, 1809. Though the conflict resulted in a British victory, Royal Navy and EIC soldiers faced brave defiance, as recorded in the aquatint: we see a fallen British soldi
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