• Thumbnail for James Silk Buckingham
    James Silk Buckingham (25 August 1786 – 30 June 1855) was a British author, journalist and traveller, known for his contributions to Indian journalism...
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  • being produced in London between 1860 and 1867. Buckingham, the youngest son of James Silk Buckingham, the oriental traveller, and Elizabeth Jennings...
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  • Attorney General James Silk Buckingham, oriental traveller Jane Buckingham (born 1968), American author and businesswoman John Buckingham (chemist), British...
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  • was published on a weekly basis on Fridays. British journalist James Silk Buckingham was also closely involved in the operation of the newspaper. The...
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  • required) "Sir James R Lumley" in C. E. Buckland, ed., Dictionary of Indian Biography (London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1906) James Silk Buckingham, Oriental...
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  • its owner James Silk Buckingham. The Asiatic Journal, the unofficial organ of the East India Company published from London took Buckingham to task for...
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  • Thumbnail for Rahmah ibn Jabir al-Jalhami
    described by his contemporary, the English traveler and author, James Silk Buckingham, as "the most successful and the most generally tolerated pirate...
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  • Thumbnail for Sharjah
    the lowest class: 3 guns). In 1829, English author and traveler James Silk Buckingham described Sharjah as such: "In the course of the night, we had passed...
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  • of the Bajalan Pashas was Zohab which they founded according to James Silk Buckingham. SARPUL-I ZOHAB ("bridgehead of Zohab"), a place on the way to Zagros...
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  • Thumbnail for George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham
    "lover" of King James VI and I. Buckingham remained at the height of royal favour for the first three years of the reign of James's son, King Charles...
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  • of the packet ships (mail-boats) that docked in nearby Falmouth. James Silk Buckingham (1786–1855) spent his childhood here and writes that most of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Ormus
    Legend of Vasco da Gama, Cambridge University Press, 1997, 288 James Silk Buckingham Travels in Assyria, Media, and Persia, Oxford University Press,...
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  • Thumbnail for Metula
    romanized: al-Muṭallah, lit. 'the lookout'. In 1816 the notable traveller James Silk Buckingham visited "a large village, called Metully, altogether inhabited by...
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  • Thumbnail for St. Louis Hotel
    William Henry Brooke from The Slave States of America (1842) by James Silk Buckingham depicts a slave sale at the St. Louis Hotel, sometimes called the...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry William Pickersgill
    He famously painted author James Silk Buckingham and his wife Elizabeth in Arab costume in 1816, reflecting Buckingham's own travels in the East as well...
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  • Thumbnail for Public library
    the annual income. In 1835, and against government opposition, James Silk Buckingham, MP for Sheffield and a supporter of the temperance movement, was...
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  • Thumbnail for Slave markets and slave jails in the United States
    the servants of travelers were shut up at night." When Reverend Thomas James, a missionary and freedman from New York, was granted permission by the...
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  • Thumbnail for History of libraries
    greater social good. In 1835, and against government opposition, James Silk Buckingham, MP for Sheffield and a supporter of the temperance movement, was...
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  • of the Calcutta Gazette in favor of a new newspaper founded by James Silk Buckingham called the Calcutta Journal. Das Gupta, Anil Chandra.; Sandeman...
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  • Thumbnail for Nimrud
    Niebuhr, who was in Mosul in March 1760. Niebuhr In 1830, traveller James Silk Buckingham wrote of "two heaps called Nimrod-Tuppé and Shah-Tuppé... The Nimrod-Tuppé...
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  • Thumbnail for Urfa
    the Greek name "Orrha", meaning "beautiful flowing water".: 136  James Silk Buckingham claimed that in earlier times, the city was known as Ruha, and with...
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  • Athenæum: a journal of literature, science, the fine arts Page 214 James Silk Buckingham, John Sterling, Frederick Denison Maurice - 1882 "Portraits of Kossuth...
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  • Thumbnail for Magdala
    Majdil, situated on the bank of the lake." The English traveler James Silk Buckingham observed in 1816 that a few Muslim families resided there, and in...
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  • Thumbnail for History of street lighting in the United States
    "distinctly yellow and not very bright". In 1841, British author James Silk Buckingham observed that New York City's street lights were inadequate: “The...
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  • Thumbnail for Karkh
    inhabited by common people and used Kuphars to cross the Tigris River. James Silk Buckingham had also visited the area during his visit to Baghdad, he visited...
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  • Thumbnail for Jaffa
    Fine Arts Boston. p. 189. ISBN 0878464611. Petersen, 2002, p. 166 James Silk Buckingham, Travels in Palestine, Through the Countries of Bashan and Gilead...
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  • Thumbnail for Achille Murat
    North America. Effingham Wilson. p. 376. Retrieved 6 May 2013. James Silk Buckingham; John Sterling; Frederick Denison Maurice; et al., eds. (1833)....
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Hood
    needed] Hood was associated with the Athenaeum, started in 1828 by James Silk Buckingham, and was a regular contributor to it for the rest of his life. Prolonged...
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  • Thumbnail for Clara S. Lane
    flowers. She painted portraits of Edward William Lane, her uncle, and James Silk Buckingham, both now in the National Portrait Gallery. Her illustration work...
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  • appeared in some memoirs. Lieutenant Young provided passage to James Silk Buckingham, and to the wife of an anonymous writer. Theodosia returned to England...
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