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Libro

Page, Th Og Ne Fran Ois, French Naval Officer (1807-1867), Capta, In Of The Frigate La Favorite.

The correspondence archive of Th og ne Fran ois Page.

Arabian Gulf, France, East Asia, Tahiti, Brasil, and elsewhere - at sea, 1830s-1860s.,

25000,00 €

Inlibris Antiquariat (Wien, Austria)

Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

Autore
Page, Th Og Ne Fran Ois, French Naval Officer (1807-1867), Capta, In Of The Frigate La Favorite.
Editori
Arabian Gulf, France, East Asia, Tahiti, Brasil, and elsewhere, at sea, 1830s-1860s.
Soggetto
Middle East, incl. Arabian Gulf: History, Travels, Falconry and Horses
Lingue
Inglese

Descrizione

Mostly 8vo, a few items 4to and folio. 94 autograph letters (signed) by Page, 81 letters addressed to Page. - II: Copy book with 144 letters by Page to the Minister of the Navy and the Colonies, as well as to other officials, in his own handwritten transcript. 4to. Bound in contemporary half calf over marbled boards. - III: Protocol of a hearing of the Suez Canal Company. 4to. (230) ff., numbered 190-425. Extensive correspondence archive kept by the prominent French naval commander during his voyages across the globe, from the Arabian Gulf to Madagascar, Rio de Janeiro, French Polynesia, China, Vietnam, and Japan. Crucially, the archive includes detailed official instructions for the first French diplomatic mission ever made to the Gulf, carried out under Page's command by the frigate La Favorite, which departed from Brest on 3 June 1841. The mission's importance is shown in perspective by a letter to Guy-Victor Duperr (1775-1846), Ministre de la Marine et des Colonies, wherein the French officials admit to their hitherto fruitless efforts to establish a relationship with the Gulf states: the writer discusses the difficulties experienced in installing a French consulate at Bushehr, while British efforts to establish themselves in the Gulf region have proved so successful. The letter emphasizes that the French interests in the region lie mainly in monitoring British advances: "Quant nous, les tentatives que nous avons faites, diff rentes reprises, pour tablir des relations avec la Perse par le golfe, ont toujours t infructueuses. Le gouvernement du Roi [.] cr a, l'ann e derni re, une agence consulaire Buschir; mais les difficult s que ce projet a rencontr es de la part du gouvernement persan n'en ont pas permis l'execution, et les choses restent ce qu'elles ont t jusqu' ce jour [.] Mais il ne saurait nous tre indiff rent d'y surveiller la marche et les agrandissements de l'Angleterre, et tel est le principal objet de l'apparition que doit y faire la corvette la Favorite sous le commandement de Mr. Page [.]". - Among other destinations, La Favorite is to visit Muscat, with which France has enjoyed previous relations, as they have managed to establish a consulate in the Sultanate of Zanzibar, which has proved useful in extending commercial relations with the Imam: "Il est, sur la route du golfe Persique, un point de la c te d'Arabie que la corvette la Favorite aura galement visiter. Je veux parler de Mascate, dont le souverain a entretenu autre fois des relations directes avec la France. L'Etablissement d'un consul Zanzibar [.] ayant paru propre favoriser l'extension du peu de rapports commerciaux que nous avons avec les tats de l'Iman [.]". Finally, the writer mentions a developing interest in Abyssinia, referring to the 1839 expedition led by Th ophile Lefebvre, that involved pearl fishing: "L'attention est eveill e en France, depuis quelques ann es, sur l'Abyssinie [.] Je n'ai pas besoin de rappeler ici la mission d'exploration confi e [.] Mr. Lef bvre [.] dans laquelle il a t accompagn par [.] un agent qu'une maison de commerce envoyait faire des essais sur la p che des perles [.]". - Page's private correspondence includes 57 letters to his wife from China, Japan, and Vietnam, discussing such matters as his health, political subjects, and the atrocities of the Second Opium War of 1860, mentioning dispossessions and people fleeing their homes: "Ces pauvres gens me font piti [.] La guerre entraine forc ment des mis res sans nombre [.] Les alarmes qu'on r pond, les menaces des anciens ma tres, les fuites, les d m nagements, les d possessions forc es [.] Je me sens mal l'aise la vue de toutes ces femmes qui pleurent pr t de leurs toits en d bris [.]". Page also provides picturesque accounts of the scenery, including a striking comparison of Japan to Tierra del Fuego: "Ainsi que la terre de feu l'extr mit m ridianale de l'Am rique, le Japon semble avoir t j t sur la flanc orientale du grand continent d'Asie sur le Pacifique par une derni re convulsion de notre globe". - Furthermore, the archive includes 23 amicable autograph letters by the naval officer and pilot of the "Art mise", Joseph-Eug ne de Poucques d'Herbinghem (1807-1900), to Page, most of them written at Cherbourg: "Il faut un chirurgien pour l'artemise qui part pour trois ans. Les cinq ou six pelerins de la confr rie [.] s'evaporent comme une vol e d'etourneaux [.]". - The collection is topped off by 144 transcript letters, the bulk issued in Papeete, as well as a protocol of a hearing of the Suez Canal Company and the French constructor Alphonse Hardon, who had exceeded the costs agreed on, which subsequently led to the termination of his contract in 1862. Finally, a report on Mexico and Buenos Aires, several poems, notes on Henry Bird (born in 1767), who was captured by American natives in 1811, a short travelogue from La Habana, several pages entitled "Notes supplementaires", all in Page's handwriting, as well as a medical certificate, Page's death certificate, some pencil sketches, and a few more brief documents are loosely enclosed. - Extremities of the copy book somewhat rubbed; letters very well preserved. An impressive collection, containing rich material reflecting a high-ranking naval officer's private throughts on French foreign affairs and on his own role therein.