Jump to content

Black's Guides

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Black's Guide to Yorkshire, 1862

Black's Guides were travel guide books published by the Adam and Charles Black firm of Edinburgh (later London) beginning in 1839.[1] The series' style tended towards the "colloquial, with fewer cultural pretensions" than its leading competitor Baedeker Guides.[2] Contributors included David T. Ansted, Charles Bertram Black, and A.R. Hope Moncrieff.

List of Black's Guides by geographic coverage

[edit]

Egypt

[edit]
  • Eustace A. Reynolds-Ball (1907), Cairo of To-Day (5th ed.), London: Adam & Charles Black, OL 6478652M

France

[edit]

Great Britain

[edit]

1830s-1850s

[edit]

1860s-1870s

[edit]

1880s-1890s

[edit]

1900s-1910s

[edit]

Ireland

[edit]

Italy

[edit]

Netherlands

[edit]

Norway

[edit]

Palestine

[edit]
  • Eustace A. Reynolds-Ball (1912), Jerusalem: A Practical Guide to Jerusalem and Its Environs (2nd ed.), London: Adam and Charles Black

Switzerland

[edit]

Turkey

[edit]
  • Demetrius Coufopoulos (1910), Guide to Constantinople (4th ed.), London: Adam and Charles Black, OL 7046206M

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Alexander Nicolson, ed. (1885), Memoirs of Adam Black (2nd ed.), Edinburgh: A. and C. Black, OL 24355448M
  2. ^ Sara Blair (2004). "Local Modernity, Global Modernism: Bloomsbury and the Places of the Literary". English Literary History. 71.
  3. ^ "New Books". Scottish Geographical Magazine. August 1888.
  4. ^ Katherine Halda Grenier (2005). Tourism And Identity in Scotland, 1770-1914: Creating Caledonia. Ashgate Publishing.