Rambles in Egypt and Candia: With Details of the Military Power and Resources of Those Countries, and Observations on the Government, Policy, and Commercial System of Mohammed Ali, Bind 2H. Colburn, 1837 |
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Side 35
... leaving Kheneh , takes a south - easterly direction , skirting the cultivated land that hereabouts extends some distance from the bank of the river . In four hours we reached the village of Beerahambah , beyond which all cultivation ...
... leaving Kheneh , takes a south - easterly direction , skirting the cultivated land that hereabouts extends some distance from the bank of the river . In four hours we reached the village of Beerahambah , beyond which all cultivation ...
Side 38
... leaving the village of Beerahambah , our road ( a hard sandy track , covered with large coarse pebbles ) had been perfectly level ; the country on all sides a dreary expanse of desert , the horizon broken only by occasional ranges of ...
... leaving the village of Beerahambah , our road ( a hard sandy track , covered with large coarse pebbles ) had been perfectly level ; the country on all sides a dreary expanse of desert , the horizon broken only by occasional ranges of ...
Side 66
... leaving Minieh , a northerly gale delayed us for several days ; for , with all our exertions and the stream in our favour , we could make no way against it . We reached Boulak on the last day of the ninth week from the time of our ...
... leaving Minieh , a northerly gale delayed us for several days ; for , with all our exertions and the stream in our favour , we could make no way against it . We reached Boulak on the last day of the ninth week from the time of our ...
Side 69
... leaving Belbeis , we arrived , in about two hours and a half , at the commencement of the Ras el Wadi , or , as it is sometimes called , the Wadi Toumlet . It is a narrow valley , that stretches about eighteen miles east by north into ...
... leaving Belbeis , we arrived , in about two hours and a half , at the commencement of the Ras el Wadi , or , as it is sometimes called , the Wadi Toumlet . It is a narrow valley , that stretches about eighteen miles east by north into ...
Side 97
... leaving the fort of Adjeroud ( five miles from the wells ) about a quarter of a mile off on the right . It encloses only a well , mosque , and a large storehouse belonging to the Viceroy , and occa- siónally when the town of Suez is ...
... leaving the fort of Adjeroud ( five miles from the wells ) about a quarter of a mile off on the right . It encloses only a well , mosque , and a large storehouse belonging to the Viceroy , and occa- siónally when the town of Suez is ...
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RAMBLES IN EGYPT & CANDIA, Bind 2 C. Rochfort (Charles Rochfort) D. Scott Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Abouzabel amongst amount Arab arrived artillery ASOMATOS Cairo Candia Candiotes Canea civil coast College conscription Copts corn cotton cultivation Delta desert despotism distance Egyptian army establishment European eyes favour feet fellah formed Frank French furnished Girgeh Greeks ground habit half hand harbour hareems hundred Ibrahim Pasha inhabitants island Israelites Kheneh kind Kosseir labour land length lofty Mameluke means medan ment miles military millions Mohammed Ali Mohammed Ali's Mohammedan Monsieur Morea Mount Ida mountain Mussulman Mylos native nearly Nile officers pass piastres population of Egypt port possess prejudices present principal produce ranks ravine reached Red Sea regiments rendered Retimo road rocky ruins Russia schools Senaar sent Sheik shelter side soldiers stands stream Suez Sultan Syria tains temple tion town traveller trees troops Turkish Turks valley Venetian vessels Viceroy Viceroy's village Wahabees walls whilst whole wind wretched
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Side 83 - And it came to pass, when Pharaoh had let the people go, that God led them not through the way of the land of the Philistines, although that was near ; for God said, Lest peradventure the people repent when they see war, and they return to Egypt...
Side 85 - And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, " Speak unto the children of Israel, that they bring me an offering : of every man that giveth it willingly with his heart ye shall take my offering. And this is the offering which ye shall take of them ; gold, and silver, and brass, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and goats...
Side 149 - ... nuovi ordini e modi che sono forzati introdurre per fondare lo stato loro e la loro securtà.
Side 82 - Marvellous things did he in the sight of their fathers, in the land of Egypt, in the field of Zoan.
Side 165 - Come on, let us deal wisely with them, lest they multiply, and it come to pass that, when there falleth out any war, they join also unto our enemies and fight against us, and so get them up out of the land.
Side 142 - Naples,'with the word honour on their lips, and a bit of ribbon at their button holes, have no other object in view than to cut out work that will put them in a way of making fortunes, at his expense, in as short a time as possible. It is thus that even the useful public works have all been hurried on, for the sake of being done quickly, rather than with a view to their being done well. The canals, bridges, factories, forts, &c. all partake of this radical defect. The Egyptian ships of war are said...
Side 355 - STREET, HIS SOLE HOUSE OF BUSINKSS. WORKS JUST PUBLISHED. i. THE BEST NAVAL HISTORY. DEDICATED, BY PERMISSION, TO HIS MAJESTY, THE NAVAL HISTORY OF GREAT BRITAIN, Brought down to the present time, from Official Documents and other Authentic...
Side 342 - Malta is no longer sufficiently near the Levant to protect our trade and give timely support to Greece, Syria, and Egypt, in case of need ; particularly, keeping in view the change that will be effected in naval warfare by the application of steam. The same may be said of all the Ionian Islands, except Cerigo, which, however, does not possess a port that could contain a collier, much less shelter a fleet.
Side 198 - This organisation (which has since undergone some modification) was considered as the best calculated for the kind of warfare in which the Egyptian army was, in the first instance, likely to be engaged, each regiment forming as it were a small corps d'armee, that could be employed separately under its own colonel. By this plan also a saving was effected in the staff and superior officers, who in the outset were difficult to be met with, Mohammed AH soon discovering that the most perfect chiboukdgee...
Side 30 - ... men, women, and children. Among the women, a very pretty one, as I took her hand, kissed me on the cheek. I returned the salute on the lip, and kissed every woman that followed, at which some made faces, but none refused. We returned to the boat, and continued all day our progress through the canal, at the rate of about two miles and a half an hour.