Introduction by Peter Hopkirk
Persia to Kashgar
Kashgar to Tashkent
Tashkent
Conditions in Tashkent
Alone
Arrested
I Disappear
To the Mountains
The Bee-farm
In Troitskoe
Return to Tashkent
Tashkent Again
Local Bolshevism
Spring Activities
Summer Difficulties
Back to the Mountains
Tashkent Affairs
To Kagan
On to Bokhara
Bokhara
Plans for Departure
In the Desert
Across the Murghab
Frontier Skirmish
Safe in Meshed
Appendix
Epilogue by Peter Hopkirk
Frederick Bailey was a British explorer and secret agent,
considered by many to be the last true player in the Great Game. In
1904, as a Tibetan-speaking subaltern, he had ridden into the
forbidden city of Lhasa as a member of a team to investigate
reports of a Russian presence there. Later, his travels in Tibet
and China earned him the highly prized gold explorer's medal of the
Royal Geographical Society. Between 1905 and 1909 he served as a
British Trade Agent
- really a cover for political intelligence work - at Gyantse in
southern Tibet. Later he accompanied a British punitive expedition
into northern Assam as its intelligence officer, and was
awarded
the coveted MacGregor Medal for explorations contributing to the
defence of India. During the First World War he was posted as an
intelligence officer to Shushtar in Persia, and in 1918 returned to
India to undertake the secret mission into Central Asia which is
the subject of this book.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |