From Berlin to Bagdad and Babylon 1000078517

549

Transcript of From Berlin to Bagdad and Babylon 1000078517

THROUGH
SOUTH
AMERICA'S
SOUTHLAND,
STCt
ERHOALE
connects
the
Bosphorus
here
ply
on
the
Danube,
with
the
have
built
in
exchange
for
the
soul
of
his
employer.
Owing,
however,
to
the
supe-ior
shrewdness
morning
beam,
With
towers
that
skirt
Europe,
p.
166
(London,
1919).
21
military
directly
by
sea
from
Kaffa
to
Trebizond
whence
they
journeyed
over
broad,
arid
plains
to
travelers who
Africa;
that
they
Noire
(by
Paris,
1917);
Western
World
from
the
im
Mittelalter,
Vol.
II,
pp.
76,
78,
158
fir.
(by
Wilholm
Heyd,
Stuttgart,
1879).
from
far
distant
lands,
it will
from
many
climes.
Parthenon,
since
its
mutilation
by
Lord
Elgin
Grand
Signor
in
Constantinople.
The
Turks
use
the
word
Serai,
which
is
river
Nieman,
when
Napoleon
and
Alexander
I
discussed
plans
heavily
burdened
*^
the
daring
navigator,
Chanak
Kalesi,
which
Europeans
usually
call
the
Dardanelles.
It
is
noted
as
being
no
evidence
whatever
for
believing
of thei
Ida
may
have
disagreed
departed
taking,
in
this
respect,
the
place
seat
a
the
great
battlefield
between
the
Orient
harem
consider
themselves
as
imprisoned
in
their
houses
^ *
^ *
^ ^
quite
impossible
  the
accepted
traditions
of
. .^
was
the
city
whose
institu-ions
best
ppendix
on
St.
and
Seneca,
p.
271.
(ImSUvtSl)
 The
Turk's
patience
is
almost
inexhaustible,
but
when
you
attack
his
women
and
children
his
anger
reprisals
and
massacres
that
startle
 *7
The
number
of
Moslems
who
entertain
a
view
similar
to
that
of
the
distinguished
Canaan
and
when
the
messengers
twice
a
year
between
Aleppo
and
Bagdad.
The
Dutch
traveler,
John
Huyghen
Van
Linschoten,
it in
This
point
Christ
but
one
nature
and
not
two,
the
human
proud
boast
Macedonians
or
other
Greek-speaking
peoples
into
their
native
lands.
Nor
was
their
antagonism
to
foreign
domination
diminished
when
their
countries
became
appanages
of
Rome
and
Byzan-ium.
They
clung
as
tenaciouslyas
ever
to
the
laws
and
customs
and
languages
of
their
fathers
and
welcomed
an
opportunity
of
concealing
under
the
guise
of
heresy
their
hatred
of
Caesar's
religionas
well
as
their
ill-concealed
disloyalty
o
Caesar's
empire.
they
had
the
ever-ready
coopera-ion
of
the
court
bishops,
whose
subservience
is
easily
ex-lained.
Their
ambitions
were
great
and
they
counted
on
southeastern
Europe
so
conspicuously
exhibited
during
the
last
century
was
a
great
blow
to
the
Phanar,
but
it
was
this
same
had
been
based
on
political
charity
in
the
numerous
practically
in
a
few
days,
that
had
puzzled
much
older
men
and
scholars
apparently
much
better
qualified
Scripture,they
stand
absolutely
in
parting
words
Vaya
Usted
con
Bios
accentuates
this
statement
when
he
dotted
the
Tigris.
During
the
entire
journey
But these
Lalla
Rookh.
Knightly
King,
Nicolas
Michel.
study
of
French
is
obligatory
companion
of
congenial
of
Zobeide,
who
occupies
so
conspicuous
a
place
in
cuneiform
texts.
It
was
called
by
its
inhabitants
Edinu,
a
word
borrowed
by
own
whose
only
shelter
was
abodes
of
the
most
primitive
type.
Glaser,
however,
agrees
with
those
Caliphate
of
Cordova,
was
in
human
species.
As
one
contemplates
the
utter
ruin
colos-al
work,
employed
million
men
in
building
the
wall
of
Babylon
and
rate
of
a
furlong
a
day
and
was
one
of
rare
delight
and
interest.
It
was
city.
The
hundreds
of
bulls
and
dragons,
in
brick
relief,
hich
cover
the
walls,
and
glowing
descrip-ions