14 NEW WORKS PUBLISHED BY COLBURN AND BENTLEY. 



NARRATIVE OF A JOURNEY through 

 GREECE in 1830. With Remarks upon the 

 Actual State of the Naval and Military Power 

 of the Ottoman Empire. By Captain T. Aber- 

 cromby Trant. In 1 vol. 8vo. with Plates. 



" Not only the latest, but the most intelligent and 

 best authenticated work we have seen relative to the 

 existing situation of Greece."— Lit. Gaz. 



" Captain Trant's work is essentially different from 

 any that has recently appeared on the subject, for he is 

 able to speak with the authority of professional and 

 technical knowledge upon points which almost all recent 

 travellers have been obliged to omit." — Court Journ. 



XI. 



TRAVELS to TIMBUCTOO, and other 

 Parts of Central Africa, during the Years 1824, 

 5, 6, 7, and 8. By M. Caillie. Complete in 

 2 vols, with a Portrait of the Author and nume- 

 rous other Plates. 



" The details of one of the most interesting expedi- 

 tions into the interior of Africa, and one so successful 

 as to lead the adventurer to the long-sought Timbuctoo, 

 must excite great public curiosity in every quarter of 

 the globe." — Lit. Gaz. 



" M. Caillie has unquestionably achieved one of the 

 grandest discoveries of modern times." — Courier. 



" Caillie is the only European who has succeeded in 

 the attempts to penetrate to Timbuctoo, and returned, 

 in spite of the perils interposed by the climate, to com- 

 municate all the information he has collected." — Even- 

 ing Paper. 



XII. 



LLEWELLYN LLOYD, ESQ. 



FIELD SPORTS of the NORTH of EU- 

 ROPE, including the Narrative of a Residence 

 in Norway and Sweden. By L. Lloyd, Esq. 



1 2mo. Edition, with considerable additions. In 



2 vols. 8vo. with numerous Plates, 32s. boards. 



" The chase of the bear, in the savage and almost 

 interminable forests of Sweden and Norway, was the 

 principal object of this enterprising English gentleman, 

 who often, for this purpose, passed whole nights in the 

 wilderness. In this daring pursuit, he destroyed a greater 

 number of that ferocious animal, than has been achiev- 

 ed by any other individual ; and his success obtained 

 him a special introduction to the King of Sweden. 

 Mr. Lloyd's work on the Field Sports of Scandi- 

 navia, is one of the most valuable productions ever 

 given to the Sporting World. It is full of individual 

 adventure, often of the most romantic and perilous 

 kind."— Morn. Jour. 



XIII. 



TRAVELS AMONG the BEDOUINS and 

 WAHABYS. By the late John Lewis Burck- 

 Hardt. Published by Authority of the African 

 Association. In 2 vols. 8vo. uniformly printed 

 with his other works. 



" Whether we consider its views of Arab manners, 

 customs, institutions, and other particulars, or its exhi- 

 bition of the remarkable Mohammedan sectaries, the 

 Wahabys, from their earliest appearance as reformers, 

 to almost the present time, we rind abundance of mat- 

 h r to gratify curiosity, and entertain and inform the 

 reader. It is the best account of the Arab tribes we 

 have ever seen." — Lit. Gaz. 



" It throws new light on a race, which has long stood 

 single among the nations, retaining from age to age a 

 character in which lofty virtues and odious vices are 

 Strangely combined. * * Bnrckhardt has done much 

 towards elucidating the manners of the Arabians, and 



communicating an idea of the real condition of that ex- 

 traordinary people. * * * This work has thrown new 

 light on the subject of Bedouin love, courtship, and 

 marriage."— Edin. Rev. 



XIV. 



A NEW VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD, 

 in the Years 1823, 24, 25, and 26. By Otto 

 von Kotzebue, Post-Captain in the Imperial 

 Russian Navy. In 2 vols. 8vo. with Plates. 



" A relation of events both attractive and important ; 

 attractive from the nature of the seas, countries, and 

 people it describes — and important, as marking the ad- 

 vance of scientific discovery, and the growth of the 

 commercial, colonial, and political power of the vast 

 empire of Russia."— Lit. Gaz. 



XV. 



TRAVELS in PERU, including a Year's 

 Residence at Potosi. By Sir Edmond Temple. 

 In2vols.8vo.withMapand25Plates, 32s. bound. 



" The author, has been enabled to collect much im- 

 portant information relative to the celebrated mines of 

 Potosi. The abundance of useful information con- 

 tained in this book, would alone entitle it to the 

 highest praise ; but it has the additional merit of com- 

 municating all that is interesting and instructive re- 

 specting the characteristic habits and peculiarities of 

 the inhabitants of Peru." — Courier. 



" A very lively and agreeable book upon a subject of 

 very great interest."— Monthly Mag. 



"The lovers of foreign travel have here a most agree- 

 able companion to escort them through Peru, and con- 

 duct them to the rich Potosi." — Lit. Gaz. 



XVI. 

 TRAVELS through the CRIMEA, TURKEY, 

 and EGYPT. By the late James Webster, 

 Esq. of the Inner Temple. In 2 vols, with nu- 

 merous Plates, 2 vols, demy 8vo. 



" A work replete with new and interesting informa- 

 tion. As the journal of a traveller it may almost rank 

 as a model of its kind." — Spectator. 



" It contains a fund of information." — Lit. Gaz. 



XVII. 



TRAVELS in CHINA, SIBERIA, and KAMT- 

 CHATKA. By Peter Doblll, Esq. In 2 

 vols, small 8vo. with Plates. 



"Mr. Dobell's account of China can hardly fail to 

 be acceptable at the present crisis." — Globe. 



" This book is full of curious facts, of new and inter- 

 esting accounts of countries known to us very imper- 

 fectly, and in many particulars not known at all." — 

 Spectator. 



XVIII. 



SIAM AND COCHIN-CHINA. 



JOURNAL of a RESIDENCE at the COURTS 

 of SIAM and COCHIN-CHINA; exhibiting 

 a view of the Actual State of those interesting 

 and little known Kingdoms. By John Craw- 

 FURD,Esq. F.R.S.F.L.S.F.G.S. &c. late Envoy. 

 Second Edition, in 2 vols. 8vo. with Map, and 

 25 Engravings. 



" To the flood of intelligence relative to these far 

 eastern countries the present volume is an addition, 

 not only of great interest, but of great importance and 

 authority." — Lit. Gaz. 



XIX. 



NARRATIVE of a RESIDENCE in AL- 

 GIERS ; comprising an Account of the Man- 

 tiers, Amusements, and modes of Living among 



