Page 4 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 4

The significance of Wellsted’s “Travels in Arabia” for
                     the geographical investigation of Southeast,
                   South and West Arabia and for the present day


                                          by

                                     Fred Scholz
                                with two illustrations



            Introduction


             In the first half of the 19th century the Sultanate of Muscat
             and Oman was at the height of its political and economic
             power. Under Saiyid Said bin Sultan (1807—1856), prob­
             ably one of the most important members of the still-reigning
             Al Bu Said Dynasty, which came to power in 1744 when
             Ahmed bin Said took over the Imamate , Oman expanded
             its trade relations beyond the Indian Ocean, entered into
             trade and shipping contracts with European states and
             maintained diplomatic relations with, for example, the
             U.S.A. So it is not surprising that the country itself, whose
             shores had already been described by Ibn Battuta and Nie­
             buhr, attracted travellers during this period; and reports
             about the south and the west of the Arabian peninsula also
             continually challenged the imagination and stimulated cu­
            riosity, giving rise to adventurous expeditions.
                Wellsted was one of those travellers. He set out as a
             British lieutenant and not as an explorer scholar. Despite
             this, he has left us in his two volume work “Travels in
            Arabia” a scientific heritage which, now that his observa­
             tions can be verified, deserves respect and recognition, even
             after one and a half centuries. The question of what justi­
             fies the reprinting of these travel memoirs still remains, how­
            ever.
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