THE BOTANICAL EXPLORATION OF ARABIA, 
463 
were named by R. Brown ; they were given to Banks and are now 
in the British Museum. Salt died in 1827 near Alexandria. 
Salt, IS. — A voyage to Abyssinia and travels into the interior ol’ 
that country, etc. London, 1814. (German edition, Weimar 1815). 
Brown, R. — List of New and Rare plants, collected in Abyssinia 
during the years 1805 and 1810, arranged according to the Linnean 
System. In Appendix IV of Salts’ Voyage. London, 1^14. 
S8I0. — Maundrell, Henry . — A Journal from Grand Cairo to Mount Sinai, 
translated by Bp. R. Cla37ton. London, 1810. 
Ab. S8S0. — Seelzen, Ulrich Jaspar. (Hajji Musa). — Conseiller d’am- 
bassade in the Russian service. He had trained himself for twenty 
years in Germany to be an Eastern explorer. He was a botanist of 
European reputation and a learned Arabist who had already spent 
some seven years in Syria. He visited Mecca and Medina and was 
qualifying as a dervish. Then he went to Sana and Aden and back 
to the Yemen highlands, in the character of Hajji Musa, a physician ; 
but he had not passed Tais before he was murdered. His last diaries 
and all his books were lost. 
Seetzen, U. J. — Auszug aus einem Schreiben, Mocha, 17. Nov. 
1810. V. Zach, Monatl. Corresp.' XXVIII, (Sept. 1813) 231. 
Seetzen, U. J. — Travels in Yemen. 1810. 
Seetzen, U. J. — Reisen durch Syrien Palsestina, Phoenicien, die 
Trans-Jordan-Lander, Arabia Petraea und Unter-Aegypten, heraus- 
gegeben und commentiert von F. Kruse, Hinrichs, H. Muller 3 
maps. 4 vols. Berlin, 1854-56. 
1816 . — Mayeux— Les Bedouines. Paris, 1816. (Many botanical refer- 
ences). 
1819 . — Sadlier, George Forster (Capt.). — A British ship of war was sent 
from Bombay to the Persian Gulf in 1819. Upon it went a special 
emissary Capt. Sadlier who, entrusted with a political mission, crossed 
the Arabian Peninsula, passing through Nejd. The journey ended at 
Jidda. 
The first report of his experiences was given to the Literary 
Society of Bombay in April 1821 (Vol. Ill, 449). 
A fuller story was published in the Records of the Bonibp.y Gov- 
ernment in 1866. — This contains a good deal of information on crops 
and- cultivation. 
1820-26. — Ehreiibcrg, Fhristaii Gottfried (1795-1876) was born at Delit- 
zsch in Prussian Saxony. He was the founder of the study of micros- 
copic organisms. In 1820-26 he visited Egypt, Syria, and Arabia ; 
in 1827 he was appointed to a medical chair at Berlin ; in 1829 he 
