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SPLENDID ACCOUNT OF SOUTH AFRICAN FAUNA

Lot No. 43: HARRIS

PORTRAITS OF THE GAME AND WILD ANIMALS OF SOUTHERN AFRICA

  • Medium: Printed Book
  • Year: 1840
  • Size: 21.5 x 17 inches
  • Place: London

Unsold (reserve not met)

Estimate

 6,00,000 -  10,00,000


Estimate US$

7200-12000

Ends at Mar 27, 2025 07:42 PM IST

Quick Overview

Total : 0 bids   |   Next 5 valid bids   | 20% Buyer's Premium   |   Additional Charges   |   Comparable

HARRIS

PORTRAITS OF THE GAME AND WILD ANIMALS OF SOUTHERN AFRICA

First Edition

Year: 1840

Size: 55 x 43 cm (21.5 x 17 inches)

Printed by Green & Martin and H.W.Martin
Published for the Proprietor by W.Pickering, and to be had of P.& D.Colnaghi and T.Cadell 1840.

No. of Lithographs: 30 Hand-Coloured Lithographic Plates, 30 Uncoloured Lithographic Vignette Illustrations

Large Folio.
Lacking Lithographic additional title with hand-coloured vignette, 30 hand-coloured lithographic plates by Frank Howard after Harris, 30 uncoloured lithographic vignette illustrations.
Few plates with some neatly restored tears.

BINDING: Later brown half morocco leather over marbled boards.

A copy of the large paper issue of 'one of the most important and valuable of the large folio works on South African fauna' (Mendelssohn).

The work was issued in five parts between 1840 and 1842, either on Colombier paper with tailpieces [i.e. large paper, as here] or on smaller Imperial paper without tailpieces. It was re-issued in 1844 by Richardson and again in 1849 by Bohn.

The present copy is in the work's most desirable form, with both titles in their first states, dated 1840.

Captain Harris, an officer in the East India Company's Bombay Engineers, was invalided to the Cape for two years, from 1835-1837. In 1836, after conferring with the naturalist Dr. Andrew Smith, he and Richard Williamson set out from Algoa Bay, by way of Somerset and the Orange River and travelled in a north-easterly direction until they reached the kraals of the famous Matabele chief Moselikatze. He proved friendly and allowed them to return via a previously closed route. The first published account of the journey appeared in Bombay in 1838 ( Narrative of an Expedition in Southern Africa) , octavo, with a map and 4 plates); encouraged by the favourable reception, Harris went on to publish the present work which was based around his sketches of the game and wild animals he had encountered in his travels. In 1841 he was sent to open up trade relations with the ancient Christian kingdom of Shoa (Shwa, now the southernmost part of Ethiopia). His success was such that he received a knighthood in 1844, in the same year he published his account of this second journey. He returned to India in 1846 where he died in October 1848.
Provenance : Collection of a Gentleman
Good Condition
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