WALSH, Robert/ALLOM, Thomas
Robert Walsh (1772-1852) was an Irish priest who was resident in Constantinople as a chaplain to Lord Strangford's Embassy from 1821 to 1824 and from 1830 to 1835. Thomas Allom (1804-1872) was a British architect (the church at Highbury as well as Saint Peter's church in Notting Hill are his creations) who abandoned his practice and travelled for nine months (c. 1836-1837) in Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine and Constantinople.
R. Walsh and Th. Allom worked together on the publication of a travel album for the Fischer publishing house. Outcome of their collaboration is this two-volume edition, with drawings by Allom, Hervé and others, and accompanying explanatory texts by Walsh. This book enjoys wide circulation to this day and together with Miss Julia Pardoe's work is one of the most characteristic albums of that period, extolling mainly the architectural and natural beauties of the multicultural capital of the Ottoman Empire.
The album opens with a thorough historical introduction and a detailed list with information on the emperors and sultans. This is followed by an array of images of monuments (mosques, fountains, cisterns, castles, cemeteries, palaces, etc.), neighbourhoods and scenes from everyday life (public bathhouses, markets, cafés, etc.) in Constantinople, enchanting the reader with their beauty. This city was enhanced in travel works of the nineteenth century, both by captivating descriptions and by pictorial representations in the style of this edition.
The work also includes views from Albania, Epirus, Thrace, the Bosporus, Adrianople and Giannena, as well as from the seven cities of Asia Minor (Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamus, Thyateira, Sardes, Philadelphia and Laodicea). In the last book of the New Testament, the "Revelation of John", written on Patmos around AD 96, these are referred to as the seven early Christian Churches-communities to which this eschatological text is addressed. The "Revelation" was the stimulus of many journeys, not exclusively pilgrimages. From the mid-seventeenth to the late nineteenth century, it occasioned spiritual inquiries and meditations of European travellers intent on visiting these ruins and cities in Asia Minor.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
WALSH, Robert/ALLOM, Thomas - Thrace
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The head of Ali Pasha exhibited at the court of Topkapi Palace.
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View of Tophane square, with the fountain of Mahmut I. Nusretiye Mosque in the distance.
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Map of Istanbul and the Bosphorus strait. Plan of Hagia Sophia.
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View of the Bosphorus. Boğaz Kavak (Kavakia) in the distance.
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The obelisk of Theodosius I at At Meydanı square (site of the Byzantine Hippodrome).
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View of Petit Champ des Morts cemetery and the old city of Istanbul from Pera (Beyoğlu).
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Apartment in the Palace of Eyüp, the residence of Asmé Sultana.
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Map of the environs of Istanbul showing water reservoirs, aqueducts,conduits and water currents.
WALSH, Robert/ALLOM, Thomas - Rest Images
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View of Mount Uludag (Olympus in Mysia). The city of Bursa in the distance.
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Saxon peasant of the Calvinist denomination in Transylvania.
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Yafta; proclamation exhibited at the Palace court next to Ali Pasha's head.
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Anadolu Hisari (Anatolia Castle) on the Asian coast of the Bosphorus.
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The remains of Hierapolis (today Pamuk Kale) from the ancient theatre.
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View of Prince islands from the Monastery of the Holy Trinity on Heybeliada island.
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The monastery of Saint George of the Precipice (Hagios Georgios tou Kremnou) on Heybeliada.
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The settlement of Guzel Hissar in Aydin on the plain of the Maeander.
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The remains of the church of Saint John the Theologian in Pergamon.
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Route through the Balkan mountains on the frontiers of Bulgaria and Rumania.