Some of the earliest printed representations of Dubai, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi heavily annotated by Captain William Henry Shippard.
By EHRENBERG, L.G. and RÜPPELL, Eduard , 1835
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Arabia und das Nil-Land Den Manen Karsten Niebuhr's un den hochverdienten Forschern L.G. Ehrenberg und E Rüppell zugeeignet vom Verfassen.

Arabia Asia
  • Author: EHRENBERG, L.G. and RÜPPELL, Eduard
  • Publication place: Gotha,
  • Publisher: Justus Perthes,
  • Publication date: 1835.
  • Physical description: Engraved map with original outline colour, dissected and mounted on linen.
  • Dimensions: 600 by 840mm (23.5 by 33 inches).
  • Inventory reference: 20579

Notes

An heavily annotated copy of Ehrenberg and Rüppell's famous map, with a manuscript pasteover to show ancient toponyms within the "Empty Quarter", and a manuscript extension sheet added at the upper margin.

Despite the key role that the Arabian Peninsula and waters had played in Mediterranean trade for centuries, European cartographers had paid surprisingly little attention to the area. The lack of rivers and waterways made Arabia particularly difficult to chart, but the exploration of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries did see a number of new maps being produced. These, however, were generally littered with errors, which were then compounded as later mapmakers drew on the inaccurate work of their predecessors.
In the early nineteenth century, as the empires of the European states were rapidly increasing, there arose a renewed interest in foreign cultures and religions, a trend that came to be known as 'Orientalism'. As a result, explorers and cartographers began to venture further into the Arabian Peninsula, undertaking expeditions to trace the deep-rooted incense trails and pilgrimage routes to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. For instance, a map published in England by Waugh & Innes in 1820, displayed the Hajj routes across the peninsula.
The present map was the result of German exploration in the region during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Mathematician and cartographer, Carsten Niebuhr, had travelled around the Gulf from 1761 to 1767, and upon his return published a series of maps that opened the region up to the European eye. Following in his footsteps were two scientists, L.G. Ehrenberg and Eduard Rüppell, who voyaged over the Red Sea and through Ethiopia in the 1820s. The latter was the first European explorer to reach the Gulf of Aquaba, collecting zoological specimens. When both men had returned to Germany, the present map was published from their research.
The map shows Arabia as it was in 1835. At this time, the Khedivate of Egypt, a tributary state of the Ottoman Empire, controlled most of the land depicted, including Sudan, the Nubian desert, the Levant, large swathes of Arabia and the western portion of Yemen. Muhammad Ali Pasha, the leader of the Khedivate from 1805 to 1848, had won much of this territory in the first half of his reign, but the Al Saud family had continued to rule the Najd region which dominates the centre of the peninsula, outlined on the map in pink. In 1841, after Pasha's unsuccessful rebellion against the Ottoman Sultan, he was forced to concede the peninsula, which has henceforth been under Saudi Arabian dynastic rule.
The map offers a detailed representation of the coastal regions, which are heavily labelled with toponyms, and the waters of the Red Sea and Arabian Gulf feature islands, reefs and some soundings. It also displays some of the earliest printed representations of Dubai, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi.

Provenance

Provenance:

Captain William Henry Shippard (1803-1865).

The map is heavily annotated by Captain William Henry Shippard, presumably for his "Museum of Mankind", founded in 1844 which presented learned lectures accompanied by maps and other illustrations. The Museum, which Shippard went to great lengths to plan and establish was "intended to illustrate the History of Man by means of popular Lectures, aided and enforced by Scenery, Maps, Costumes, &c., adding every scenic attraction to the higher views of Instruction, and combining Art, History, Travels, and Geography."

This map may have been used for his lecture on "The Arabians" delivered in January 1845 on Dean Street in Soho.

Shippard was an enthusiast for Arabic culture and a defender of Islamic civilisation. This map shows the depth of his research. Annotations come from many different sources, from the ancient geography of Ptolemy, the Classical Arabic scholars al-Idrisi and Abu al-Feda, as well
as modern travellers to the Arabian Peninsula.

The places names marked in vermillion on the map are from Ptolemy, corrected by Shippard himself based on sources held by the British Museum. He has also drawn in many different routes across the Arabian Peninsula, based on the geographies of Mamluk-era geographer Abulfeda (1273-1331), the Muslim Arab geographer Muhammed al-Idrisi (1100-1165), and the first recorded British traveller to enter the Najd region of Arabia, George Forster Sadleir (1789-1859), as well as the 1822 work by Nikolaus Heinrich Brehmer, Entdeckungen im Alterthum. Besides these, Shippard also adds several notes on a wide variety of subjects, including the trade and produce of the region, as well as specific details, such as number of days taken and number of camels required.
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