The Source of the Nile

by Richard Francis Burton

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Sir Richard Francis Burton (1821-90) was an explorer who began his career in the Bombay army in 1842. While in India he developed his linguistic talent, mastering more than forty different languages and dialects. He turned to writing books in the 1850s and over the remaining forty years of his life published dozens of works and more than 100 articles. In this two-volume work, published in 1860, Burton discusses geographical and ethnological matters, while also giving space to the show more 'picturesque points of view which the subject offers' in recounting his journey to Zanzibar and around the lakes in present-day Tanzania. In Volume 1 Burton begins his expedition on the island of Zanzibar before moving inland to explore the Kingani and Mgeta Rivers. He crosses the Usagara mountains and ends the volume in Unyamwezi, 'the far-famed land over the moon'. show less

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De los grandes descubrimientos geográficos de la humanidad -cabría decir, para hablar con propiedad, de los pueblos europeos-, el conocimiento de la ubicación exacta de las fuentes de donde mana el misterioso Nilo, uno de los ríos mas largos y caudalosos de la Tierra, ha excitado desde muy antiguo la curiosidad e imaginación de hombres de ciencia, viajeros y geógrafos. Pero fue necesario esperar al siglo XIX para tener un conocimiento fiel y preciso del origen del Nilo. En 1857, dos temerarios aventureros, militares geógrafos británicos, el capitán Richard Francis Burton y su asistente, el capitán Speke, obtuvieron licencia y recursos económicos de la omnipotente Real Sociedad Geográfica de Londres para emprender su show more acariciada aventura. La presente obra es un extracto de los numerosos diarios del capitán Burton sobre aquel viaje, y en ella nos describe, desde el punto de vista siempre sorprendido y curioso del viajero, las peripecias, las dificultades (fiebres, ataques indígenas, desiertos inagotables…), los delirantes paisajes de las selvas vírgenes, así como los ritos y costumbres de los pueblos africanos que iban encontrando en el largo y tortuoso itinerario de aquel viaje fabuloso en busca de las fuentes del Nilo. show less

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325+ Works 15,189 Members
Richard Francis Burton was an explorer, translator, writer, soldier, spy, fencer, and diplomat. He is most famous for his translations of One Thousand and One Sights and the Kama Sutra and for having been the first European to visit the Great Lakes of Africa. He once traveled to Mecca in disguise and spoke nearly thirty languages. He died in 1890.

Richard Francis Burton has a Legacy Library. Legacy libraries are the personal libraries of famous readers, entered by LibraryThing members from the Legacy Libraries group.

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Curteis, Ian (Introduction)

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Common Knowledge

Original title
The Lake Regions of Central Africa
Alternate titles
The Source of the Nile
Original publication date
1860
People/Characters
Sir Richard Francis Burton
Important places
Africa; White Nile; Central Africa; Lake Tanganyika; Zanzibar
Disambiguation notice
First published as "The Lake Regions of Central Africa", later republished as "The Source of the Nile".

Classifications

Genres
Travel, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
916.704History & geographyGeography & travelGeography of and travel in AfricaEast Africa
LCC
DT361 .B96History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaAfricaHistory of AfricaCentral Sub-Saharan Africa
BISAC

Statistics

Members
282
Popularity
113,901
Reviews
3
Rating
(4.22)
Languages
English, French, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
11
UPCs
2
ASINs
17