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Travels in the interior of Africa xx

LT011996
2002
Mungo Park

Editora Wordsworth Ed.
Idioma Inglês
Estado : Usado 5/5
Encadernação : Brochado
Disponib. - Indisponível

€8
Mais detalhes
  • Ano
  • 2002
  • Código
  • LT011996
  • Detalhes físicos
  • Dimensões
  • 13,00 x 20,00 x
  • Nº Páginas
  • 406

Descrição

In 1795 Mungo Park, a twenty-four year old Scottish surgeon, set out from the Gambia to trace the course of the Niger, a river of which Europeans had no first-hand knowledge. Travels in the Interior of Africa is his journal of that extraordinary journey. He travelled on the sufferance of African rulers and soon came to depend for his survival on the charity of African villagers. Before he reached the Niger, he endured months of captivity in the camp of a Moorish chief. His subsequent misadventures included being robbed and stripped naked by Fulani bandits. Yet, throughout his travels, Park maintained a remarkable empathy for African societies and beliefs. He recorded what he saw as accurately as he could, and without presuming European superiority. He prefaced his journal with the disclaimer that it ‘has nothing to recommend it but truth'. It is a plain unvarnished tale, without any pretensions of any kind…’ Park’s truthfulness and lack of pretension will endear him to modern readers.

Travels in the interior of Africa xx

€8

LT011996
2002
Mungo Park
Editora Wordsworth Ed.
Idioma Inglês
Estado : Usado 5/5
Encadernação : Brochado
Disponib. - Indisponível

Mais detalhes
  • Ano
  • 2002
  • Código
  • LT011996
  • Detalhes físicos

  • Dimensões
  • 13,00 x 20,00 x
  • Nº Páginas
  • 406
Descrição

In 1795 Mungo Park, a twenty-four year old Scottish surgeon, set out from the Gambia to trace the course of the Niger, a river of which Europeans had no first-hand knowledge. Travels in the Interior of Africa is his journal of that extraordinary journey. He travelled on the sufferance of African rulers and soon came to depend for his survival on the charity of African villagers. Before he reached the Niger, he endured months of captivity in the camp of a Moorish chief. His subsequent misadventures included being robbed and stripped naked by Fulani bandits. Yet, throughout his travels, Park maintained a remarkable empathy for African societies and beliefs. He recorded what he saw as accurately as he could, and without presuming European superiority. He prefaced his journal with the disclaimer that it ‘has nothing to recommend it but truth'. It is a plain unvarnished tale, without any pretensions of any kind…’ Park’s truthfulness and lack of pretension will endear him to modern readers.