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This is an evocative account, first published in 1883, of the final expedition to the East by Isabella Bird (1831-1904), who was one of the most famous Victorian female explorers, and the first woman to be admitted to the Royal Geographical Society. The Golden Chersonese is the ancient name for the Malay Peninsula, as named by the Greek geographer and astronomer Ptolemy. The book is a collection of twenty-three letters written by Bird to her ailing sister, Henny, in Scotland. Henny died as the book was published and Bird dedicates the book of letters to her memory. As well as giving detailed descriptions of her travels and adventures in and around Malaysia, the book also includes fascinating accounts of many aspects of the region, including the people, culture, landscapes and wildlife. It also contains a number of delightful illustrations and a thorough appendix.
Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Malay Peninsula --- Singapore --- Description and travel. --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德,
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Isabella Bird (1831-1904) was one of the most famous Victorian female explorers, and the first woman member of the Royal Geographical Society. Bird was recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for physical and nervous complaints. She toured the United States and Canada, Australasia and the Far East before her marriage to Dr John Bishop in 1881. After his death in 1886 she decided to become a missionary, and travelled to India and little-known parts of the Middle East. She then went to Iraq, China and Morocco. Each of her expeditions produced very successful books, many in the form of letters to her sister, beginning with An Englishwoman in America (1856); most of these are also reissued in this series. This biography by Anna Stoddart, who had known and admired Bird, was published in 1906 and depicts a daring, determined and perceptive woman.
Women travelers --- Bird, Isabella L. --- Travelers, Women --- Travelers --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德,
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In 1856, Isabella Bird published The Englishwoman in America, the first of what would be many books of her travels around the world. Adopting a tone of aloof bemusement, she describes in detail the hardships and annoyances of her travels by sea from England to Halifax, and on the road to Boston, Cincinnati, and Chicago. The book's 20 chapters are full of keenly observed and entertainingly told stories of pickpockets and luggage thieves, greasy hotels, and Americans who are very polite, but have the unfortunate habit of spitting on the floor. Bird admits to sharing the regrettably prejudiced view the English have of America, but nevertheless finds much to like and admire in this new country bustling with ethnically diverse immigrants full of energy and bravado. The Englishwoman in America is a wonderful travelogue that offers a lively and personal glimpse into mid-nineteenth-century America.
English --- Travel --- Bird, Isabella L. --- United States --- Canada --- Description and travel. --- British --- Ethnology --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Description and travel
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Isabella Bird (Mrs Bishop, 1831-1904) was recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for her physical and nervous difficulties. Her accounts of travel in America, Hawaii, Japan and Persia were best-sellers. This two-volume work, first published in 1898, was one of the books arising from Bird's visit to Korea and China between 1894 and 1897, the other being The Yangtse Valley and Beyond (1899), also available in this series. Korea was a battleground during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, and subsequently became increasingly dominated by Japan, being annexed fully in 1910. Bird provides vivid descriptions of the Korean people, their way of life and customs at a time when the country had only recently opened up to the West. In Volume 1 she gives her first impressions of Seoul, and travels down the Han river, commenting especially on the lowly position of women.
Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Korea --- Description and travel. --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Description and travel
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Isabella Bird's Unbeaten Tracks in Japan was published in 1880 and recounts her travels in the Far East from 1876. Bird was recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for her physical and nervous difficulties. She toured the United States and Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the Sandwich Islands, before travelling to the Far East in order to strengthen herself to marry Dr John Bishop and live in Edinburgh. Created out of the letters Bird wrote home, primarily to her sister, Volume 1 recounts her experiences as a solo woman traveller living among the Japanese in Yokohama and Niigata. It includes descriptions of clothing, food and drink, education, housing, theatre, women's lifestyles, religion, plant life, medicine, shopping and other day-to-day activities, as well as the vicissitudes and excitement of the conditions and process of travelling, including by boat and pack-horse.
Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Japan --- Description and travel. --- Social life and customs --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Description and travel
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Isabella Bird's Unbeaten Tracks in Japan was published in 1880 and recounts her travels in the Far East, begun four years earlier. Bird was recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for her physical and nervous difficulties. She toured the United States and Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the Sandwich Islands, before travelling to the Far East in order to strengthen herself to marry Dr John Bishop and live in Edinburgh. Based on the letters Bird wrote home, primarily to her sister, Volume 2 covers her journeys to Yeso, Tokyo, Kyoto, and the Ise Shrines, and includes her experiences of staying with the Hairy Ainu, the indigenous inhabitants of northern Japan. As with the first volume, it includes much detail of the lifestyles, customs, and habits of the people she encountered, as well as a chapter on Japanese public affairs.
Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Japan --- Description and travel. --- Social life and customs --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Description and travel
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Isabella Bird's best-selling book on Japan is republished here, but with a difference: for the first time, it is now fully annotated with supporting commentaries, providing the twenty-first century reader with an enhanced informed view of the new 'modern Japan' as Bird experienced it in 1878.
Japan-Social life and customs-1868-1912. --- Travel / Essays & Travelogues. --- Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Japan --- Social life and customs --- Japan. --- Victorian. --- geography. --- travel. --- women. --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德,
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J2297.31 --- J3400 --- Europe: Genealogy and biography of the United Kingdom, Great Britain, England --- Japan: Geography and local history -- Honshū and Japan in general --- Bird, Isabella L. --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Travel
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After the success of The Englishwoman in America (also reissued in this series), the indefatigable Isabella Bird (1831-1904) continued her travels - first to Scotland, then to Australia and Hawaii - before returning to the United States and taking up residence in what was then the newest state, Colorado. Her adventures here - recorded as letters to her sister which she artlessly tells the reader were never intended for publication - included riding alone across the prairie, trying to help a family dying of cholera in the face of indifference from the local inhabitants, a sight of the invalids who were coming to Denver in huge numbers to be cured by the mountain air, and an encounter (if it was nothing more) with that western archetype, the one-eyed, romantic, courteous, poetry-declaiming outlaw, who by the following year was 'in a dishonoured grave, with a rifle bullet in his brain'.
Frontier and pioneer life --- Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- West (U.S.) --- Description and travel. --- Border life --- Homesteading --- Pioneer life --- Adventure and adventurers --- Manners and customs --- Pioneers --- History --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Description and travel
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Recommended an open-air life from an early age as a cure for physical and nervous difficulties, the indefatigable Isabella Bird toured the United States and Canada, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, the Far East, India, Turkey, Persia and Kurdistan. Her accounts of her travels, written in the form of letters to her sister, were bestsellers. In 1875 she published her account of six months in the Hawaiian archipelago. During this time she explored the islands on horseback, visiting volcanos, climbing mountains, and living with the natives. The book includes considerable detail about the lifestyles, customs, and habits of the people she encountered, and of the geography and geology of the islands. Her enthusiasm for Hawaii and its people is evident from her vivid descriptions, but she disliked the restrictive atmosphere of the foreign settlements. The book includes outlines of the history and economy of the islands.
Bird, Isabella L. --- Travel --- Hawaii --- Description and travel. --- Social life and customs --- Bishop, --- Bird, I. L. --- Author of The Englishwoman in America, --- Englishwoman in America, Author of the, --- Bishop, J. F., --- Bisyop, I. B., --- Bādo, Izabera, --- Bādo, Isabera Eru, --- Bādo, I. L., --- Bishop, Isabella Bird, --- Bisop, Isabella Bŏdŭ, --- Bīshūp, Īzābilā, --- Bo'er, Yishabeila Luxi, --- Bode, Yishabeila, --- Bishop, Isabella Lucy Bird, --- 伊莎贝拉・伯德, --- Chavaē --- Gavaĭi --- Gavaĭskie Ostrova --- Gavaĭtæ --- H.I. --- HA --- Hahuai --- Hauaiʻi --- Haṿai Inzlen --- Havaiji --- Havajai --- Havajas --- Hawai-shū --- Hawaii Eyaleti --- Hawaii-Inseln --- Hawaii (Kingdom) --- Hawaii (Republic) --- Hawaii (State) --- Hawaii (Ter.) --- Hawaii (Territory) --- Hawaiian Islands --- Hawaiju --- Hawaje --- HI --- Khavai --- Kingdom of Hawaiʻi --- Mokuʻāina o Hawaiʻi --- Republic of Hawaii --- Shtat Havaï --- State of Hawaii --- Territory of Hawaii --- Tlahtohcāyōtl Hahuai --- Xiaweiyi --- Xiaweiyi Zhou --- Χαβάη --- Хаваји --- Хаваи --- Штат Гаваї --- Гавайтæ --- Гавайи --- Гаваї --- האוואי --- הוואי --- ハワイ --- ハワイ州 --- 夏威夷 --- 夏威夷州 --- 하와이 --- 하와이주 --- Description and travel
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