A first‑hand journey into Abyssinia in the 1810s, offering gritty battle scenes, vivid landscapes, and authentic daily life seen through an English observer.
This edition presents Nathaniel Pearce’s and Mr. Coffin’s simultaneous accounts of a decade in Abyssinia, from marches and armaments to monasteries and markets. Read through Pearce’s journals and accompanying narrative, and you’ll glimpse frontier politics, religious life, and the trials of travel across difficult terrain, all framed by the era’s constant danger and changing alliances. The text blends military detail with cultural observation, painting a complex portrait of a world at once ancient and dynamic.
- firsthand descriptions of campaigns, leaders, and marches across the Ethiopian highlands
- vivid notes on towns, churches, priests, and social customs encountered on the road
- glimpses of wildlife, landscapes, and daily survival along long, difficult journeys
- appendices and supplementary material that illuminate language, religion, and local life
Ideal for readers of historical travelogues, early 19th‑century Africa, and ethnographic writings that bring a distant world to life.