Captured by slavers as a boy, freed by the Royal Navy, and raised at a mission, Samuel Crowther in 1864 became the first African to be ordained as an Anglican bishop. As a priest, he accompanied the Scottish merchant MacGregor Laird on his expedition to West Africa in 1854, and celebrated Sunday services in a variety of bizarre locations and perilous conditions. This 1855 book is Crowther's detailed record of his journey aboard the steamboat Pleiad. Written from the unusual perspective of an African-born, London-educated clergyman, it is a congenial and evocative account of the day-to-day difficulties confronting the explorers, their interactions with native peoples, and encounters with slavery and civil war. Crowther, a keen linguist, went on to publish several books on African languages including Nupe, Igbo and Yoruba. This book includes a substantial appendix comparing the grammar and vocabularies of the languages he encountered.
ISBN: | 9781108011839 |
Publication date: | 20th May 2010 |
Author: | Samuel Crowther |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 268 pages |
Series: | Cambridge Library Collection - Religion |
Genres: |
Christianity History of religion Religious mission and Religious Conversion Expeditions: popular accounts |