The Cradle of Mankind; Life in Eastern Kurdistan
THE CRADLE OF MANKIND
THE RIVER OF EDEN.
(The Zab entering the Tyari Gorges). The view down stream from the mouth of the Ori valley, a little above Tal. The distant snow peak is Ghara Dagh on the southern side of Tkhuma.
No. 1
BY THE REV. W. A. WIGRAM. B.D. (Camb.) D.D. (Lambeth) AUTHOR OF “THE HISTORY OF THE ASSYRIAN CHURCH” AND SIR EDGAR T. A. WIGRAM AUTHOR OF “NORTHERN SPAIN” ILLUSTRATED FROM SKETCHES AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY SIR EDGAR T. A. WIGRAM SECOND EDITION.
A. & C. BLACK, Ltd., 4, 5 & 6, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.1. 1922 First Edition published May, 1914. Second Edition, with two additional Chapters, published Autumn, 1922.
The truth is, that ye ken naething about our hill country, or Hielands as we ca’ them. They’re a kind of wild world by themselves, full of heights and howes, caverns, lochs, rivers and mountains, that it would tire the very deevil’s wings to flee to the tap of them. And the folk are clean anither set frae the likes of huz; there’s nae bailie-courts amang them—nae magistrates that dinna bear the sword in vain. Never another law hae they but the length of their dirks; the broad-sword’s pursuer, and the target is defender, and the stoutest head bears langest out.
Sir Walter Scott (“Rob Roy”)
THE first sixteen chapters of this book were given to the public in the spring of the year 1914. Since that date the country has acquired an additional interest for Englishmen, owing to the British acceptance of a “mandate” for its supervision and also to the picturesque and heroic part played in the Great War by the “Assyrian” mountaineers.