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Libri antichi e moderni

Blunt Wilfrid Scawen

Gordon at Khartoum. Being a Personal Narrative of Events in Continuation of 'A Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt'. OUTSTANDING ASSOCIATION COPY IN FULL MOROCCO OF THE RARE FIRST EDITION

Stephen Swift, 1911

920,00 €

Island Books

(Devon, Regno Unito)

Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

Anno di pubblicazione
1911
Autore
Blunt Wilfrid Scawen
Editori
Stephen Swift
Soggetto
military, sudan, gordon, general gordon, chinese gordon, khartoum, wilfrid blunt, wilfrid scawen blunt, military, sudan, gordon, khartoum
Lingue
Inglese

Descrizione

8vo., First Edition, with a portrait frontispiece in photogravure (original tissue guard present), Contents page mounted on new leaf; handsomely bound in dark red full morocco, back gilt with raised bands, gilt top, uncut, gilt from original board and backstrip preserved and mounted and new and separate leaves, a most attractive copy ideal as a gift or for presentation. THIS COPY WAS PRESENTED BY SIR HUMPHREY BELL TO THE LIBRARY OF CHRIST'S HOSPITAL SCHOOL. IT BEARS HIS PRESENTATION BOOKPLATE ON FRONT PASTE-DOWN WITH NEAT PRESS-MARK OB FRONTISPIECE RECTO. This scarce account is more usually found in the second impression of the following year. One of the greatest English public servants of the Sudan, Sir [Bernard] Humphrey Bell (1884-1959) was the second son of the Rev. J.T. Bell, headmaster of Christ's Hospital School (then at Hertford). He was educated at Christ's Hospital (1894-1903) followed by a scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1906. In the following year he joined the Sudan Political Service and in 1912 married Lilian Constance Bagot, daughter of the Rev. G.P. Dew. In 1917 he was called to the bar at Gray's Inn, and from 1918-1923 served in Baghdad, first as President of the Court of First Instance and then as President of the Court of Appeal. In 1923 he returned to Sudan as Judge of the High Court, having first been appointed CBE in that year. He was appointed Chief Justice of the Sudan in 1926, and received the insignia of the second class of the Order of the Nile from the King of Egypt in 1929. From 1930-1936 he served as Legal Secretary to the Government of the Sudan, after which he retired, and was created KBE in the following year. During WWII he served as Assistant Legal Advisor to the Home Office. Sir Humphrey Bell died in Hampshire in 1959. A SPLENDID AND HIGHLY RELEVANT ASSOCIATION COPY OF THE RARE FIRST EDITION.
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