Pompeii, Paestum & Herculaneum in the Winter
- Return flights
- 7 nights half-board in a 4-star hotel
- 14 meals: 7 breakfasts, 7 dinners and welcome drink
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Mon-Fri: 09:00 -17:00 Sat: 09:00 - 17:00 Sun& BH: Closed
Mon-Fri: 09:00 -17:00 Sat: 09:00 - 17:00 Sun& BH: Closed
The Society’s holdings comprise over 7,000 items specifically relating to the historical geography of South America, dating from the 17th century to the present day. Highlights include a series of striking watercolour paintings attributed to Joseph Brown, a British trader, who lived in Colombia between 1826 and 1841, a hand-drawn map of the Rio Negro by Alfred Russel Wallace from his exploration of Brazil with Henry Walter Bates from 1848-1852, and an aneroid barometer used by Percy Fawcett during his expeditions into the interior of Brazil between 1906 and 1925.
In the footsteps: Victor Coverley-Price | In the footsteps: Clements Markham | In the footsteps: Sir William Marin Conway | In the Footsteps: Percy Harrison fawcett
In 1932, Victor Coverley-Price was invited by the Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society to join Professor J.W. Gregory as interpreter and artist on his forthcoming expedition to Peru. Gregory, a geologist, planned to study the geology and volcanic activities in the region and worked alongside Meta McKinnon Wood, who specialized in fossil collecting, and Mariano Tarnawiecki, a mining engineer who resided in Peru. The expedition also relied heavily on the knowledge of indigenous Peruvians to aid their travel through the unknown and difficult terrain.
Their exploration began amongst the arid landscapes of the Paracas Peninsula and the Nazca Desert on the west coast. From there, they travelled east into the high Andes towards Cuzco and the Rio Urubamba. Throughout the expedition, Coverley-Price found time to document the beauty of the landscape through a series of stunning watercolours. Whilst navigating the Rio Urubamba, their canoe capsized on the powerful Pongo de Mainique rapids and tragically, Gregory and one of the guides were swept downriver and drowned.
'The scenery in this part of the Andes is very beautiful … Wild nature reigns supreme. Except on the very highest peaks and on the steepest precipices, there is a coat of green everywhere.'
- Coverley-Price, The Geographical Journal, 1932
After leaving the Royal Navy, Clements Markham travelled to Peru and set off across the Andes via Nasca to Cuzco, arriving in March 1853 after a 300-mile journey. He spent several weeks in and around Cuzco and it was at this time that he was first introduced to the cinchona plant, its cultivation and its use as a source of quinine as treatment for malaria. In 1860, he led the ‘Chinchona Mission’, along with the botanist, Richard Spruce, to collect chinchona plants and transplant them to selected sites in India for quinine production. Twenty years later Markham’s vision was realised as the cinchona plantations in India were producing 220,000 kilograms of quinine bearing bark.
Markham also spent time researching Inca history and describing the architecture and Inca ruins throughout his journey through Peru.
William Martin Conway began climbing whilst at university and was elected as a member of the Alpine Club in 1877. In 1892 he mapped 2,000 square miles (5,180 square km) of the Karakoram Range in the Himalayas and was knighted three years later in recognition of the achievement.
In 1898 he set out on an expedition to the Bolivian Andes where he made the first recorded ascent of Mount Illimani with two Swiss guides, Antoine Maquignaz and Louis Pellissier.
Conway's expedition helped establish some of the first reliable maps of certain regions of the Bolivian Andes, and he documented his findings in his book "The Bolivian Andes: A Record of Climbing & Exploration in the Cordillera Real in the Years 1898 and 1900."
His work in the Bolivian Andes contributed significantly to both the geographical understanding of the region and the development of high-altitude mountaineering in South America. Conway's background as an art historian and his attention to detail also meant that his expedition accounts included valuable observations about the cultural and archaeological aspects of the regions he explored.
Percy Fawcett was a British explorer who, along with his son Jack, disappeared in 1925 during an expedition to find what he believed to be an ancient lost city in the uncharted Mato Grosso region of Brazil.
Fawcett first travelled to South America in 1906 when he was invited to conduct survey work for the Bolivian-Brazilian boundary commission, following the Bolivian government’s sale of a portion of territory to Brazil in 1903. Fawcett arrived in La Paz, Bolivia in June 1906. From there, he descended the Rio Beni to begin the survey work of the Rio Acre and Rio Abuna before his exploration of the Mato Grosso region of Brazil.
He made a total of seven expeditions to the region, tracing the source of the Rio Verde in 1908 and the source of the River Heath in 1910, before his disappearance in 1925.
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All historical images (photos, artwork, maps) ©RGS-IBG