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'Travels in Assyria, Media, and Persia, including a journey from Bagdad by Mount Zagros, to Hamadan, the ancient Ecbatana, researches in Ispahan and the ruins of Persepolis, and journey from thence by Shiraz and Shapoor to the sea-shore. Description of Bussorah, Bushire, Bahrein, Ormuz, and Muscat, narrative of an expedition against the pirates of the Persian Gulf, with illustrations of the voyage of Nearchus, and passage by the Arabian Sea to Bombay.' [‎33] (64/582)

The record is made up of 1 volume (545 pages). It was created in 1829. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: Printed Collections.

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TO ARTEMITA, OR KHAN-E-KEEN. 33
my notes of our route, as it was impossible, from the crowded state
of the khan, to attempt to write there, without betraying myself as
a stranger.
I enjoyed my evening bath with all the privacy I could desire;
but as the sun was nearly set, I caught only a few minutes after
wards to execute the other portion of the task for which I had
thus stolen away.
The town of Khan-e-Keen consists of two portions, occupying
the respective banks of the river Silwund, which are connected to
gether by a bridge across the stream. The river here flows nearly
from south to north through the town; about half a mile to the
southward of the bridge the bend of the river is seen, where the
stream comes from the eastward; it then goes north for about a
mile, and afterwards turns westerly, bending gradually to the
southward, so as to form the Giaour-Soo, which runs to the west
of Kesrabad.
The river is here, however, called the Sirwund or Silwund, and
has its source in the eastern mountains, though no one at the place
pretends to know the exact distance of it from hence. The bridge
is newly built of brick-work, and is supported on thirteen pointed
arches and buttresses, all of good masonry. It is high, broad, and
well paved across, and is a hundred and eighty horse-paces long,
though the river itself is not, on an average, more than half that
breadth.
Advantage has been taken of a bed of solid rock, which lies in
the centre of the stream, to make it the foundation of the bridge;
and the water of the river is led under each of the arches, through
a narrow and deep channel, originally cut no doubt in the rock,
but since worn into deep and apparently natural beds, leaving
each side of the rock dry. In this way, each arch has under it
two broad level spaces of stone, with a deep and rapid current
going between them; so that, at this season of the year, when the
water is low, a person can walk dry-shod across the rock, by the
side of the bridge; and the places beneath the arches form so

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Travels in Assyria, Media, and Persia, including a journey from Bagdad by Mount Zagros, to Hamadan, the ancient Ecbatana, researches in Ispahan and the ruins of Persepolis, and journey from thence by Shiraz and Shapoor to the sea-shore. Description of Bussorah, Bushire, Bahrein, Ormuz, and Muscat, narrative of an expedition against the pirates of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , with illustrations of the voyage of Nearchus, and passage by the Arabian Sea to Bombay.

The book is written by James Silk Buckingham and contains illustrations and a map at the beginning, entitled "General map of Persia, with the routes pursued by Mr Buckingham in his travels from Bagdad across the mountains of Zagros, through Assyria, Media & Persia, incuding the chief positions of all the ancient cities & modern towns, from the banks of the Tigris to the shores of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. " and signed "Sidy. Hall, sculpt."

Buckingham is identified on title page as "author of Travels in Palestine and the countries east of the Jordan; Travels among the Arab tribes; and Travels in Mesopotamia; member of the Literary Societies of Bombay and Madras, and of the Asiatic Society of Bengal." Name of manufacturer from p. ii. Portrait of the author signed as follows: "Drawn and Etched by W.H. Brooke, A.R.H.A." and "Aquatinted by R. Havell Jnr." Dedication to Sir Charles Forbes on p. v. Vignette on p. 545. With publication announcement of the second edition of Buckingham's Travels in Mesopotamia on last unnumbered page.

Publication Details: London : Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street, 1829. Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street, Fleet Street.

Extent and format
1 volume (545 pages)
Arrangement

There is a table of contents at the beginning (vii-xvi) and an index at the end of the volume (539-545).

Physical characteristics

Dimensions: 283 mm x 220 mm.

Pagination: xvi, 545, [1] p., [2] leaves of plates (1 folded).

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Travels in Assyria, Media, and Persia, including a journey from Bagdad by Mount Zagros, to Hamadan, the ancient Ecbatana, researches in Ispahan and the ruins of Persepolis, and journey from thence by Shiraz and Shapoor to the sea-shore. Description of Bussorah, Bushire, Bahrein, Ormuz, and Muscat, narrative of an expedition against the pirates of the Persian Gulf, with illustrations of the voyage of Nearchus, and passage by the Arabian Sea to Bombay.' [‎33] (64/582), British Library: Printed Collections, 567.g.5., in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023859736.0x000041> [accessed 16 February 2025]

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