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Portion
of Eastern Palestine
Map
by Claude R. Conder.
50 x 41 cm.
London: Stanford’s Geographical Establishment, ca. 1881.
From
the collection of the W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological
Research (Jerusalem), map dr.22, 22-00-14a.
Click
the map or PDF link for a larger image.
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Facts
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This
map is an example of the work of the great explorer of Palestine,
Claude Reignier Conder (1848-1910), grandson of the polymath
and writer Josiah Conder. He was a career officer in the British
Army, Royal Engineers, and as a student was known for his
surveying, his geometrical work and his free-hand drawing.
In 1872 he was selected to head the scientific survey of Western
Palestine, under the auspices of the Palestine
Exploration Fund, which had begun surveying Jerusalem
some seven years earlier. He began work in July 1872. The
survey, after much danger and hardship, was completed in 1877
by H. H. Kitchener, after an attack by Arab tribes resulted
in Conder’s being invalided back to England in 1875.
In 1881 Conder resumed work for the P. E. F., surveying east
of the Jordan. The survey was conducted in August, September
and October of 1881, and a survey of about 500 square miles
was completed, from the Jordan River to Amman. The survey
had to be limited because of hostilities in Lebanon. The members
of the survey party included A. M. Mantell, T. Black and G.
Armstrong, under the command of Conder, who was completely
fluent in Arabic. In 1883 he published a popular account of
the survey under the title Heth and Moab, Explorations in
Syria in 1881 and 1882. Not only was Conder a capable surveyor,
but he was interested in the history and archaeology of the
areas he surveyed. In addition to actual mapping, he collected
information regarding topography, ethnography and archaeology,
and identified many places mentioned in the Bible and previously
unknown. Conder also devoted himself to the languages of the
country and to the decipherment of ancient inscriptions.
The
first publication date of Conder’s map of Eastern Palestine
is unclear; the map may have been published separately sometime
after 1881. It certainly was published in connection with
the official publication of the survey: The Survey of
Eastern Palestine. Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography,
Archaeology etc., which appeared in 1889, published by
the Palestine Exploration Fund, where the map is found in
a pocket in the binding of the work. The Palestine Exploration
Fund was the moving force behind archaeological work in Palestine
and Jerusalem. The first survey of Jerusalem was made by a
group of volunteers, mainly army engineers, in an effort to
supply a water system for the city: this was the start of
the Palestine Exploration Fund. This unofficial body funded
archaeological work in Palestine for many years. Its many
publications include the Ordnance Survey of Jerusalem,
The Survey of Western Palestine, Excavations
in Jerusalem, 1867-1870, and The Survey of Eastern
Palestine. |