Weşan : A & C Black | Tarîx & Cîh : 1922-01-01, London |
Pêşgotin : | Rûpel : 434 |
Wergêr : | ISBN : |
Ziman : Îngilîzî | Ebad : 160x220 mm |
Hejmara FIKP : Lp. Ang. 885 | Mijar : Dîrok |
Danasîn
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Naverok | Pêşgotin | Nasname | ||
Versions:
The Cradle of Mankind: Life in Eastern Kurdistan The first sixteen chapters of this book were given to the public in the spring of the year 1914. Since that date the country has acquired an additional interest for Englishmen, owing to the British acceptance of a "mandate" for its supervision and also to the picturesque and heroic part played in the Great War by the "Assyrian" mountaineers. While no attempt has been made to tell the full tale of "England in Irak" it has been thought well to take the opportunity given by the appearance of a second edition, and to bring the story of the Assyrian nation up to the date of writing; and the facts which the two concluding chapters record have been collected and verified during a prolonged personal intercourse with the principal actors on the spot. 1922 |
PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION It requires at least four persons to compound a salad sauce, say the Spaniards. The requisite incompatibilities can never co-exist in one. A spendthrift should squander the oil, and a miser dole out the vinegar. A wise man should dispense the salt, and a madman should do the stirring. Similarly, it has been stated that it takes two people at least to write a book of travel ; a newcomer to give the first impressions and an old resident to reveal the true inwardness of things. Though the quality of the ingredients must remain of more importance than the proportions, the authors of the present volume hope that at least the latter are correct. And the country itself possesses most intense and varied interest. It contains some of the grandest scenery, and some of the most venerable monuments in the world. It is the very “fons et origo” of our Indo-European ancestors. Its traditions connect it with the Garden of Eden, with Noah, and with Abraham. Its folk-lore preserves the old Nature-worship which originated in the brains of the Apeman. Its history records the very dawn of civilization, and the rise and fall of the earliest of the great empires. The every-day life of its present inhabitants is to this hour the life of the Patriarchs, the life of Europe in the Dark Ages, the life of the Highlands of Scotland in the days of Stewart Kings. It is not an accessible country, even when judged by half-civilized standards. It is visited on sufferance only, even by its nominal rulers themselves. Fortune has given to the authors the opportunity of travelling through it, and of residing in it, and they have ventured to set down m these chapters the impressions it has left upon their minds. |