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Source:
Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p. 18. |
Caravan at Dothan
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We passed through the interior of Palestine with a caravan consisting of four
tents, five mules, four horses and eight men, including dragoman, cook and
waiter . . . .The most of our baggage was so fragile that every mile of the
fifteen thousand in our contemplated journey [through Palestine, Egypt, and
other countries] was attended with peril. Yet we returned safely without the
loss of a day from rain, without missing a single railway or steamboat
connection and without the loss of a single box of our plates. These boxes had
been carried from place to place by railway cars, by express wagons, by
carriages, by steamboats, by row-boats, by porters. They had been in the holds
of ships, they had been strapped on the backs of mules, they had been to the
pyramids, they had been over the road traveled by our Savior and His Apostles,
they had followed in the footsteps of St. Paul in his missionary journeys, they
had been to the city of Plato and Aristotle and the home of the Caesars.
(Source:
Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, 1.) |
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Travellers' Camp |

Source:
Jerusalem, Bethany, and Bethlehem, p.
100. |
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The cook had a long square iron framework
in which he placed the charcoal, and about
which were ovens, pans and other cooking
utensils. This was the entire outfit for
cooking. It was carried about day by day, and
also the charcoal which furnished fuel for the
fire. By means of this primitive and simple
cooking appliance he was able to furnish a
dinner of six or seven courses . . . .The
large tent . . . is the sleeping tent. There
are several partitions inside, so that we have
sitting room and bed rooms, and the whole
place carpeted and comfortably furnished. It
was our custom in the evening after reaching
camp to pin our maps to the sides of the
tents, get out our books and write out our
notes. (Source: Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, 190.) |
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Source: Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p. 137. |
Interior of Our Tent at
Nazareth |
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After breaking camp in the morning the
muleteer, cook and waiter pass ahead of the
dragoman and tourists to have tents and dinner
ready on the arrival of the tourists
themselves . . . .There is a vast difference
in the methods of travel which modern tourists
enjoy to-day and the methods in vogue at the
beginning of our era. Travelers now ride on
English saddles and on excellent horses,
sleeping at night in carpeted tents most
comfortably furnished. In our party there were
but two of us, the writer and the artist, and
so amply were we equipped that our caravan in
motion looked like a little regiment passing
over the hills. This picture represents the
interior of our tent. The figures you observe
are bits of different and brilliantly colored
calico sewed to the canvas of the tent, giving
a picturesque appearance to the interior,
serving as the paper does to the modern
dwelling. (Source: Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p. 137.) |
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Our Tent Near Bethel |

Source:
Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p. 230. |
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Bethel, where our lunch tent was pitched on
the 2nd of May, 1894, is thought to be not far
from Ephraim where our Savior retired. In
modern towns throughout Palestine a lunch tent
is usually furnished to travelers to rest
under at noon. The sunshine is generally very
warm, or the wind is blowing very hard, and
the tent is a great convenience. Horseback
riding in Palestine is very tiresome, and
after a tedious ride of four or five hours
travelers are greatly refreshed by an hour's
sleep, so that the dragoman keeps one of the
muleteers along with the tourists, who carries
the lunch tent, pillows, rugs, etc., and as
soon as the party stops this tent is pitched,
rugs are placed on the ground with pillows for
each traveler, then, while the dragoman makes
the coffee, the tourists go to sleep. (Source:
Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p.
230.) |
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See
Camels,
Travel in
Desert, Travel
by Sea, or
Bedouin |
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