Black's Guides were travel guide books published by the Adam and Charles Black firm of Edinburgh (later London) beginning in 1839.[1] The series' style tended towards the "colloquial, with fewer cultural pretensions" than its leading competitor Baedeker Guides.[2] Contributors included David T. Ansted, Charles Bertram Black, and A.R. Hope Moncrieff.

Black's Guide to Yorkshire, 1862

List of Black's Guides by geographic coverage edit

Egypt edit

  • Eustace A. Reynolds-Ball (1907), Cairo of To-Day (5th ed.), London: Adam & Charles Black, OL 6478652M

France edit

Great Britain edit

1830s-1850s edit

1860s-1870s edit

1880s-1890s edit

1900s-1910s edit

Ireland edit

Italy edit

Netherlands edit

Norway edit

Palestine edit

  • Eustace A. Reynolds-Ball (1912), Jerusalem: A Practical Guide to Jerusalem and Its Environs (2nd ed.), London: Adam and Charles Black

Switzerland edit

Turkey edit

  • Demetrius Coufopoulos (1910), Guide to Constantinople (4th ed.), London: Adam and Charles Black, OL 7046206M

References edit

  1. ^ a b Alexander Nicolson, ed. (1885), Memoirs of Adam Black (2nd ed.), Edinburgh: A. and C. Black, OL 24355448M
  2. ^ Sara Blair (2004). "Local Modernity, Global Modernism: Bloomsbury and the Places of the Literary". English Literary History. 71.
  3. ^ "New Books". Scottish Geographical Magazine. August 1888.
  4. ^ Katherine Halda Grenier (2005). Tourism And Identity in Scotland, 1770-1914: Creating Caledonia. Ashgate Publishing.