The Near East: Dalmatia, Greece and Constantinople

audiobook

The Near East: Dalmatia, Greece and Constantinople

by Robert Hichens

EN·~3 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

ILLUSTRATED BY JULES GUÉRIN AND WITH PHOTOGRAPHS

0:13
2

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES BY THE DE VINNE PRESS

0:03
3

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

3:13
4

Chapter I - PICTURESQUE DALMATIA

39:17
5

IN AND NEAR ATHENS

0:03
6

Chapter II - IN AND NEAR ATHENS

35:33
7

THE ENVIRONS OF ATHENS

0:04
8

Chapter III - THE ENVIRONS OF ATHENS

35:56
9

DELPHI AND OLYMPIA

0:03
10

Chapter IV - DELPHI AND OLYMPIA

35:21

Description

A leisurely voyage begins along the rugged Dalmatian coast, where Roman amphitheaters loom over quiet harbors and centuries‑old churches echo with simple, unhurried bells. The author guides listeners through sleepy towns and wind‑kissed islands, painting the landscape with the same care as the accompanying water‑color plates. Even the distant, gold‑trimmed walls of an ancient arena come alive, reminding us how history can feel both monumental and intimate.

The journey then turns to the sun‑drenched crags of Greece, wandering among the marble columns of the Acropolis, the solemn stones of Delphi, and the spirited crowds of an Athenian market. From there the narrative slips across the Bosphorus to Constantinople, where bustling bazaars, soaring mosques, and the timeless Galata Bridge create a vibrant mosaic of East and West. Through vivid description and timeless illustrations, the traveler captures a world poised between antiquity and the early twentieth‑century pulse, inviting listeners to wander through history’s living tableau.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (213K characters)

Release date

2012-03-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Hichens

Robert Hichens

1864–1950

Best known for witty satire and exotic, atmospheric fiction, this prolific English writer moved from late-Victorian literary scandal to bestselling popular novels. His work ranges from the Oscar Wilde send-up The Green Carnation to the desert romance The Garden of Allah.

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