“CELEBRATED IN HISTORY AS THE SCENE OF MANY OBSTINATE CONFLICTS”: WITH 19 LOVELY HAND-COLORED FOLIO AQUATINT VIEWS OF THE HOLY LAND
(MIDDLE EAST) SPILSBURY, Francis B. Picturesque Scenery in the Holy Land and Syria, Delineated during the Campaigns of 1799 and 1800. London: Thomas M’Lean, 1819. Tall, slim folio (13 by 18-1/2 inches), 20th-century three-quarter red polished calf, raised bands, marbled endpapers, top edge gilt.
Second folio edition of English naval surgeon Francis Spilsbury’s account of his travels in the Holy Land and Syria during the Napoleonic campaigns there, with 19 finely hand-colored folio aquatint views.
Spilsbury was surgeon on board HMS Tigre during the campaigns of 1799 and 1800. The Tigre brought Sir William Sidney Smith to defend Acre against Napoleon’s siege, and led a naval force in support of Turkish armies which finally relieved Acre, and his text gives some account of the military campaigns and the Turkish dignitaries. In his reminiscences Napoleon accused Smith of making him miss his destiny, as Smith’s timely appearance thwarted Napoleon’s drive to invade Syria and forced him to retreat to Egypt. The views are mostly connected with the coastal towns of modern Lebanon and Israel, though several are from Spilsbury’s travels inland to meet the Grand Vizier in charge of the Turkish army, Jezzar Pacha, and other dignitaries. First published in folio in 1803, with a mezzotint portrait of Sir William Sidney Smith that was not included in this second edition. Tooley 464. See Abbey, Travel 381; Colas 2788; Blackmer 1585. Bookplate.
Interior quite clean, hand-coloring vivid and fine. An attractively bound copy in fine condition.