Catalogue Review: Reese, Oak Knoll, & Shapero

- by Michael Stillman

The Islamic World from Bernard J. Shapero Rare Books.


Our third catalogue comes from Bernard J Shapero Rare Books and it’s entitled The Islamic World. This is a world not well-understood by most people in the west, America in particular, but now very much on our minds. Perhaps if we read more about the region’s past, we would better understand our present situation.

Many of the places described in these books have become very familiar to us today. Item 12, James Atkinson’s Sketches in Afghaunistan, describes a land very familiar to us, even if we spell the name differently. Atkinson traveled with the military to this country in 1838, and wrote about it in this 1842 work. £2,850.

Item 19, Monument de Nineve…, hits some even more recently familiar place names. Author Paulo Emilio Botta was appointed French consul to Mosul in what is now Iraq in 1842. He used his appointment to search antiquities of the area, excavating ruins in Khorsabad. Botta believed he had found the lost city of Ninevah, but had instead uncovered an ancient palace dating back to 710 B.C. Botta published his book, along with drawings by Eugene Flandin, in 1849. £25,000.

Item 14 is an interesting title. It’s called Travels of Ali Bey in Morocco, Tripoli, Cyprus, Egypt, Arabia, Syria and Turkey. “Ali Bey” was one Domingo Badia, a Spaniard who disguised himself as an Arab and visited sites such as Mecca that are off-limits to non-Moslems. Printed in 1816. £6,500.

Most of the books in this catalogue come from Europeans describing their trips to this part of the world. Of course, they see the land through the eyes of very different cultures. Item 93 is by Dr. Saleh Soubhy, an Egyptian public health official. He undertook the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca) in 1888 and 1891, and wrote this book with the intention of clearing up misconceptions he believed were generated by European writings on the subject. £3,500.

For the adventuresome, there’s Item 97, The Voiages and Travels of John Struys… by Jan Struys. Three voyages took the author through much of the Middle East, Mediterranean, and even Russia and Japan. Book titles were long and dramatic back then (1684), and part of the title of this book is very descriptive: “an account of the author’s many dangers by shipwreck, robbery, slavery, hunger, torture, and the like…” £3,500.