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The Travels of Reverend Olafur Egilsson / translated from the original Icelandic text and edited by Karl Smári Hreinsson and Adam Nichols.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Ólafur Egilsson, 1564-1639, author.
Contributor:
Nichols, Adam, 1952- editor.
Karl Smári Hreinsson, editor.
Standardized Title:
Reisubók sera Ólafs Egilssonar. English
Language:
English
Icelandic
Subjects (All):
Ólafur Egilsson, 1564-1639--Travel.
Ólafur Egilsson.
Ólafur Egilsson, 1564-1639--Captivity, 1627.
Slavery--Africa, North--History--17th century.
Slavery.
Pirates--Africa, North--History--17th century.
Pirates.
Lutheran Church--Iceland--Clergy--Biography.
Lutheran Church.
Europe--Description and travel--Early works to 1800.
Europe.
Livorno (Italy)--Social life and customs--17th century.
Livorno (Italy).
Algiers (Algeria)--Social life and customs--17th century.
Algiers (Algeria).
Westman Islands (Iceland)--History--17th century.
Westman Islands (Iceland).
Genre:
Electronic books.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (273 p.)
Place of Publication:
[Washington, District of Columbia] : The Catholic University of America Press, 2016.
Summary:
"Translation of a 17th-century narrative written by a Lutheran pastor from Iceland who was captured by Turkish pirates, taken to North Africa, and then released and managed to make his way back across Europe to Iceland. His story, collected here with letters written by his fellow captives, gives intimate details of life, and relations between Christianity and Islam, in that period"--Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Chapter I. About almighty God's will
Chapter II. About signs and events
Chapter III. About the preparations that were put into effect when word of the pirates was first heard
Chapter IV. About the evil attacks and the methods used to capture some of the people
Chapter V. About what honest people told me of how the pirates captured the Icelanders, and how some Icelanders were killed
Chapter VI. About how the people were treated as captives by the evil men and put into the stone house, then taken forth and placed onboard a ship
Chapter VII. About events in preparation for sailing
Chapter VIII. About our travel to the Barbary Coast and what happened during that voyage
Chapter IX. About some difficulties which the Turks had on the voyage and about how they reacted
Chapter X. About how it went (to the best of my knowledge) for the good people who had been captured and were taken to that place [i.e., Algiers]
Chapter XI. About what happened to me and my family thereafter
Chapter XII. About the remarkable things I saw and about the town [i.e., Algiers] itself
Chapter XIII. About the dress of the people and how their plates and drinking cups were in that place
Chapter XIV. About how I was driven from Algiers and how things went on my miserable travels
Chapter XV. About what went on in that place [Livorno], good and bad, and about my journey to Germany
Chapter XVI. About the place [Livorno], its churches, the habits of the monks, their dress, and their way of performing divine service
Chapter XVII. About their dress in that town [Livorno] and the unusual things that I saw there
Chapter XVIII. About my travels to Genoa, and from there to Marseilles
Chapter XIX. About what happened to me in Marseilles and what prevented me from travelling to Paris
Chapter XX. About some of the handwork and events which I saw there for providing food for the people
Chapter XXI. About Marseilles itself, the dress of the inhabitants, both men and women, and about my travels from there Chapter XXII. About what happened to me in Holland, and about that country and its places
Chapter XXIII. About my travels to Fleyland [the island of Vlieland] and to Kronuborg [Kronborg, on the island of Zealand, in Denmark] and my reception there
Chapter XXIV. About my arrival in Copenhagen, my good reception, and donations from honest men, learned and not
Chapter XXV. About my complaint, which I had to relate to everyone, and about how I was incapacitated by my sorrows, and about what sorrow and pain may do for us
Chapter XXVI. About my voyage from Copenhagen to Iceland and how I was received when I came there
Chapter XXVII. About the comfort and consolation which we get from the words of God; He tells us to pray for help and promises us a hearing; and of this we have examples
Afterword.
Notes:
"Original English edition, 2008"--Title page verso.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-8132-2870-0
OCLC:
958937319

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