The autobiography of Theophilus Waldmeier, missionary: being an account of ten years’ life in Abyssinia; and sixteen years in Syria.

London, S.W. Partridge & Co., Leominster, the Orphans’ Printing Press, [1886].

8vo, pp. xiv, 339, [1]; with frontispiece and many full-page illustrations; some foxing to half-title and flyleaves; very good in original brown cloth, spine and upper cover lettered in gilt; a little wear to extremities, rear hinge slightly split; ticket of William George’s Sons Ltd of Bristol to front pastedown.

£100

Approximately:
US $126€118

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First edition. Waldmeier was Swiss, but as ‘I have the privilege of knowing so many dear friends in England and America I have therefore written this autobiography in the English language’ (Preface). He arrived as a Protestant missionary in 1859 and established a friendly relationship with the Emperor Theodore. Despite this rapport, Waldmeier was imprisoned along with other Europeans whom the Emperor feared were plotting against him. The Emperor’s refusal to release these captives led ultimately to a devastating British punitive expedition: ‘I will narrate the facts which gave rise to all the difficulties, captivity, trials, bloodshed, and horrors, which ended with the costly English expedition, and the suicide of King Theodore, which have never been thoroughly described, though so many books, journals, and pamphlets have been published about them. I think I may say that I am able to describe these things better than any of the Europeans who have been in Abyssinia, not that I am any more diligent than others, but on account of my having been in the immediate presence of the King, where I could see how things went on’ (p. 78).

Pankhurst 39.

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