SHOW SIDEBAR
The Grand Tour in the Ottoman Empire: Power, Pleasure and Ruins - An illustrated talk by Dr Philip Mansel
The Grand Tour in the Ottoman Empire: Power, Pleasure and Ruins
An illustrated talk by Dr Philip Mansel
Tuesday 10th May at The Nomads Tent.

Philip Mansel shows that large numbers of European travellers, including Casanova, Byron and Disraeli, continued their Grand Tour, by sailing on from Italy, accompanied by artists and interpreters, to Constantinople, Syria and Egypt. Their motives were power, pleasure and desire to see classical ruins. The English ambassador, Lord Winchilsea wrote from Constantinople in 1663: ‘this city I hold much better worth seeing than all Italy.’ Country houses acquired ceilings copied from Athens or Palmyra, portraits in Ottoman dress, and cedars from Lebanon. The Ottoman Empire was particularly attractive during the Napoleonic wars, when the rest of Europe became a battle field.  This talk will be illustrated by over 150 pictures of the cities and sites of the Ottoman Empire, including Constantinople, Ephesus, Athens, Baalbek, Palmyra and Alexandria.

Philip Mansel’s books include Constantinople : City of the World’s Desire (1995); Levant (2010), on Smyrna, Alexandria and Beirut; Aleppo (2016); and King of the World: the life of Louis XIV (2019), whose agents travelled across the Ottoman Empire in search of antiquities, manuscripts and rare plants. He is a founding committee member of the Society for Court Studies www.courtstudies.org and the Levantine Heritage Foundation www.levantineheritage.com

Find out more at http://www.philipmansel.com/

Buy tickets here.

TAGS: