Journal of the British Embassy to Persia;

£5,000 · Offered by Shapero Rare Books

the most complete edition The most desirable and complete third edition which contains the long awaited part II relating the rest of the voyage in Persia and the return journey, as well as the extended part I of the second edition issued in 1825, and Elements of Sanskrit by Price published separately in 1828. William Price (1780-1830) was a British diplomat and orientalist who, in 1810, was appointed Assistant Secretary and Interpreter to Gore Ouseley's Embassy to Persia. Even amongst such exalted British Farsi speakers he stood out as the most fluent and possessed the ability to memorise long stretches of Farsi just by ear. Price kept a travel journal and made hundreds of drawings, of landscapes and buildings, during his travels but they were mostly only published in his own works. He recorded tablets and cuneiforms on his trips to Persepolis and Babylon, and paid particular emphasis to the languages and arts of the region: he dedicated a chapter to one of the principal courtly painters Aka Ali Nakosh, and translates Jami's introduction to Jusuf and Zulaikha, found on the wall of the caravansary of Dingah. The number of plates varies in surviving copies. Ours closely matches the copy in the Bibliothèque Municipale of Lyon which has 46 plates. Two supplementary plates, not found in the Lyon copy, but included in the 1825 edition are present in this copy: 'Asterak' and 'Khodihisar'. The copy at the Wellcome Library has only 36 plates, as do the copies in Harvard and the Librar

  • Binding: Hardcover

Found via Rare Books Intel, a search across rare-book dealers, auction houses and marketplaces worldwide.