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David Roberts RA

Sidon

1796 - 1864

Subscription and First Edition lithographs
Full plate: 75
Presented in a acid free mount

Original hand coloured subscription edition and modern hand-coloured lithograph for the first edition of David Roberts' The Holy Land.

Published by F.G. Moon & Son, London 1842-49.

Roberts and his party arrived at Sidon on the 27th of April 1839 after travelling the twenty-five miles or so from Tyre. It was after dark when they approached the gates and - as the town authorities continued to be concerned about the existence of the plague at Jerusalem - they were not given permission to enter that evening. Instead, in the middle of a thunderstorm, they were forced to pitch their tents slightly to the south and Roberts had to wait until the following day to explore.

 

Sidon was one of the most celebrated cities of the ancient world, renowned for its ecomonic power and its opulence. Its rulers included Alexander the Great and later the Kings of Egypt and Syria. In the seventeenth century it was ruled by the Emir of the Druses, Fakhr-ed-Din, who built up trade with Venice. The mulberry trees of Sidon provided silk for its main source of commerce. After spending nine years in Florence at the court of the Medici, the Emir returned to Sidon and adorned the city with extravagantly constructed public buildings.

 

By Roberts’s day little was left of this sophisticated city but he was nevertheless impressed and very pleased to have been able to make drawings there, he wrote in his journal: 'The people seem well dressed, and the town thriving… on the whole I was much pleased with it. The view of Sidon which we saw from a little farmhouse with gardens of olive and mulberry trees, is one of the finest I have seen. The chain of Lebanon, now covered with snow, rises magnificently in the background’.

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