ANDREWS, Mottram
The British lieutenant colonel and painter Mottram Andrews took part in the Crimean war. Immediately after the signing of peace, he published an impressive work which depicts several stages of the war, from the moment when the British fleet arrived at the Dardanelles and joined the French forces to the siege of Sebastopol.
The lithographed plates and the texts which accompany them allow the reader to follow war events, and at the same time describe landscapes, sights, monuments and cities rarely shown in travel accounts and albums. The Album is considered one of the first editions of war correspondence. The drawings were made by Andrews and lithographed by the renowned engraver Sutcliffe, who worked in London and showed his work in numerous exhibitions.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
ANDREWS, Mottram - Black Sea
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View of Varna in the Crimean War. In the background, the ships of the British fleet.
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The monastery of Saint George at Balaklava, close to Sebastopol. In the background, cape Aya.
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View of Sebastopol from the British camp during the Crimean war.
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Camp of the allies of the Crimean war (England, France and the Ottoman Empire) at Sebastopol.
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Aqueduct on Chornaya river, position held by the Kingdom of Sardinia in the Crimean war.
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Cemetery at Sebastopol. This spot was highly important to the British forces in the Crimean war.
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View of Sebastopol in 1855, after its siege by the British army during the Crimean war.