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  1. Isabel Burton, née Arundell, was a model cosmopolitan wife to her famous explorer husband Richard Francis Burton for thirty years. Yet, two pieces of twenty-first-century neo-Victorian Burton-biofiction – The Collector of Worlds by Iliya Troyanov and The Strange Affair of Spring-Heeled Jack by Mark Hodder – write her clean out of their core narratives. Having explored these conspicuous ...

  2. Sir Richard Burton and Lady Isabel Burton. 79 likes. The explorer Richard Francis Burton and his wife Isabel seek adventure and romance in the frontiers of the British empire. A three-part mini-series.

  3. 31 de dic. de 2014 · Burton, Isabel, Lady, 1831-1896. Publication date 1875 Topics Palestine -- Description and travel, Syria -- Description and travel Publisher London : King ...

  4. 1 de mar. de 1997 · Sexual Politics of Authorship: Rereading the travels and translations of Richard and Isabel Burton. R. Phillips. Geography, History. 1999. Women who accompanied male adventurers and geographers often made crucial (yet generally unacknowledged) contributions to the research and writing of their partners. These women were not always named….

  5. 2 likes. Like. “Ein Leben voller Reisen, Abenteuer und Gefahr, Sehen und Lernen, verherrlicht durch die Liebe - das wünsche ich mir”. ― Isabel Burton. 0 likes. Like. Isabel Burton is the author of The Life of Captain Sir Richard F. Burton (3.71 avg rating, 7 ratings, 1 review, published 1893), The Romance of Isabel La...

  6. Isabel (née Arundel), Lady Burton. Her husband, the explorer and diplomat Sir Richard Burton, was the focus of Isabel's life. They met in 1851, marrying ten years later, despite her parents' disapproval. She helped engineer his posting as British Consul to Damascus in 1869 and accompanied him. Enjoying wild rides in the desert, she adored Syria.

  7. 19 de mar. de 2006 · Lady Burton always used it out of England, and took rank and precedence at foreign courts as the Countess Isabel Arundell (of Wardour). She used to say, characteristically: “If the thing had been bought, I should not have cared; but since it was given for a brave deed I am right proud of it.”