W. Rickmer Rickmers (1873-1965) was a German explorer and mountaineer who visited and explored central Asia five times between 1894 and 1906. This book provides an account of his travels in the area he calls Turkestan, which incorporates modern Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and south-west Kazakhstan, and was first published in 1913. The region, which contains the ancient cities of Samarkand and Bukhara, had not been previously described in so much detail by a western European traveller. Rickmers includes accounts of both these historic cities as well as describing the social life of the indigenous people, with a comprehensive survey of the geography of the region. Richly illustrated with 207 maps and photographs, this volume provides an insight into the everyday life of the area before the upheavals of the Soviet era.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and...
This travelogue is a fascinating account of the author's journey through Russian Turkestan (now Uzbekistan). With vivid descriptions of the landscape, people, and culture, the author provides a...
Explore the Russian territory and independent native states in Western Turkestan with John Mowbray Trotter as your guide. This comprehensive account covers the topography, statistics, and tribes of...
A personal account of Spalding's travels through Central Asia in the late 1800s, on a mission to establish trade relations with the native tribes and explore the region's rich history and culture...
Join Oscar Terry Crosby on a fascinating journey through Tibet and Turkestan, two areas steeped in history and tradition. Along the way, Crosby provides a study of new conditions that he observes,...