Synopsis
The Basque Provinces: Their Political State, Scenery, And Inhabitants by Edward Bell Stephens is a historical travelogue and field reportage of the Carlist War in the Basque provinces of northern Spain, with focus on Navarre, Guipúzcoa, and Biscay. As a Morning Post correspondent, Stephens traces battles, sieges, logistics, and administrative reorganizations around Bilbao, offering vivid ethnographic sketches of Basque life, culture, dress, and daily resilience under siege. The narrative juxtaposes Carlist leadership under Don Carlos and Infante Don Sebastian with Christino forces aided by British volunteers and naval support, while probing diplomatic questions about neutrality, information warfare, and press propaganda. It interleaves frontline scenes—river defenses, assaults, and the relief of Bilbao—with portraits of Basque women, frontier commerce, and hospital life, and culminates in an appendix of official reports and letters that ground the story in documentary detail. The result is a memoiristic blend of military history, travelogue, and ethnography that illuminates war, identity, and memory in the Basque country.
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