British explorer, translator, and Orientalist, Sir Richard Burton was born in Ireland of an English family but raised in Italy and France. His multicultural childhood helped him eventually master twenty-five languages. He was the first translator of the Arabian Nights (sixteen volumes, 1885-88).
After expulsion from Oxford University, he joined the Indian Army in 1842. He recorded his experiences as an intelligence officer in the Bombay Native Infantry in his first book Scinde or the Unhappy Valley (1851). Burton disguised himself as a Muslim to make the pilgrimage to Mecca in 1853, which he described in Personal Narrative (1855).
With John Hanning Speke (1827-1864), Burton intended to find the source of the Nile. They explored Somalia in 1854. This was the subject of his book First Footsteps in East Africa published in 1856. They set out from Zanzibar to the Lake Tanganiyika area in 1857, and arrived at the Lake in 1858. Speke, although nearly blind from exposure to the sun during his travels, continued the expedition alone and discovered what he considered the source of the Nile: Lake Victoria. But Burton disputed this and the two had a falling out over the issue of the source of the Nile. Speke died in a hunting accident in 1864. |