Life of Livingstone.

By E Ewing Richie

Printed: Circa 1900

Publisher: A Fullerton & Co. London

Edition: Pictorial edition

Dimensions 20 × 27 × 6 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 20 x 27 x 6

Condition: Very good  (See explanation of ratings)

£25.00
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Item information

Description

Black leather spine with red title plate and gilt title. Maroon boards.

  • F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

     A well illustrated late Victorian edition of a ‘hero’ of British Society.

                                        

David Livingstone FRGS FRS (19 March 1813 – 4 May 1873) was a Scottish physician, Congregationalist, and pioneer Christian missionary with the London Missionary Society, an explorer in Africa, who wanted to abolish slavery, and one of the most popular British heroes of the late 19th-century Victorian era. David was the husband of Mary Moffat Livingstone, from the prominent 18th-century missionary family, Moffat. Livingstone had a mythic status that operated on a number of interconnected levels: Protestant missionary martyr, working-class “rags-to-riches” inspirational story, scientific investigator and explorer, imperial reformer, anti-slavery crusader, and advocate of British commercial and colonial expansion.

                                              

Livingstone’s fame as an explorer and his obsession with learning the sources of the Nile River was founded on the belief that if he could solve that age-old mystery, his fame would give him the influence to end the East African Arab–Swahili slave trade. “The Nile sources”, he told a friend, “are valuable only as a means of opening my mouth with power among men. It is this power [with] which I hope to remedy an immense evil.” His subsequent exploration of the central African watershed was the culmination of the classic period of European geographical discovery and colonial penetration of Africa. At the same time, his missionary travels, “disappearance”, and eventual death in Africa‍—‌and subsequent glorification as a posthumous national hero in 1874‍—‌led to the founding of several major central African Christian missionary initiatives carried forward in the era of the European “Scramble for Africa”.

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