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History Unplugged Podcast

Richard Burton: The Victorian Explorer Who Discovered the Kama Sutra, Made a Secret Pilgrimage to Mecca, and Knew 29 Languages

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 3 May 2018

⏱️ 71 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Everybody imagines the World's Most Interesting Man to be a fictional grey-haired lothario who drinks Mexican beer and boasts of his legendary exploits. But what if a man like this really lived?

It turns out he did. He is Richard Francis Burton, a Victorian-era explorer who learned 29 languages, went undercover as a Muslim on a pilgrimage to Mecca, and wrote 50 books on topics ranging from a translation of the Kama Sutra to a manual on bayonet exercises.

In this episode I explore Burton's life and his incredible achievements. He nearly discovered the source of the Nile with his expedition partner, John Hanning Speke. He had a massive facial scar that came from a Somali tribesman throwing a spear that passed through both his cheeks. He travelled 1,500 miles in a solo canoe expedition down Brazil's São Francisco River, discovering a jungle tribe and deciphering their language.

Adventures aside, Burton is best known today for translating the Arabian Nights and the Kama Sutra into English. He was the most educated explorer of the Victorian age, a time when only men of rough disposition set out to discover foreign lands, in stark contrast to the landed gentry, who were uninterested in international travel, unless it was in the comfort of a steamship to go administer a colony for the sake of the Crown or as a military officer deployed to extend the global landholdings of the British Empire.

Burton published over three dozen volumes, ranging from such topics as linguistics, ethnology, poetry, geography, fencing, and travel narratives. He spoke Greek, Arabic, Persian, Icelandic, Turkish, Swahili, Hindi, and a host of other European, Asian, and African tongues.

Learn about Burton's extraordinary life, and how a beer pitchman could never hope to live up to it.

Transcript

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0:00.0

War has played a key role in the history of the United States,

0:03.4

from the nation's founding right down to the present.

0:06.2

Wars made the United States independent, kept it together,

0:09.6

increased its size, and established it as a global superpower.

0:13.3

Hi, I'm James Early, host of the Key Battles of American History podcast.

0:17.6

In each episode, I discuss American history through the lens of the most important

0:21.6

battles of America's Wars. To start listening now,

0:24.8

go to pathanonpodcast.com or search Key Battles of American History

0:29.6

on your favorite podcast to platform.

0:36.0

The history of North America podcast is a sweeping historical saga of the United States,

0:41.2

Canada, and Mexico, from their deep origins to our present epoch.

0:46.0

Join me, Mark Vinet, on this exciting, fascinating epic journey through time,

0:51.0

focusing on the compelling, wonderful, and tragic stories of North America's inhabitants,

0:56.5

heroes, villains, leaders, environment, and geography.

1:01.4

I invite you to come along for the ride.

1:06.4

Welcome to the History Unplugged podcast.

1:09.4

The unscripted show that celebrates unsung heroes,

1:12.9

myth busts historical lies, and rediscoveres the forgotten stories that changed our world.

1:19.6

I'm your host, Scott Rank.

1:27.2

Deep in a harsh Arabian summer, Al-Haj Abdulah traveled along the Dusty Road to Mecca.

1:33.7

He was thankful that he rode on camelback and was not shuffling along on foot,

1:38.7

like a pack animal, like his two servants, and he was doing this to perform his his life pilgrimage.

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