The Scotsman

Intrepid Scots women who were unsung heroes celebrated in new exhibition­s

- By GEORGE MAIR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Two major free exhibition­s celebratin­g intrepid and adventurou­s Scottish women will open at the National Library of Scotland on Saturday - marking the return of the library's exhibition programme for the first time in 15 months.

"Petticoats and Pinnacles: Scotland’s Pioneering Mountain Women" recognises the women who are unsung heroes of mountain climbing, while "The Eye of a Stranger: Henriettal­ist on’ st rave ls ", which also opens to the public on saturday, presents the journals and letters of the Glasgow woman who travelled by diplomatic means to Constantin­ople (Istanbul) more than 200 years ago, and spent years observing and documentin­g internatio­nal relations and local customs.

Although some degree of Covid-19-related restrictio­ns will remain in place, and booking is essential, the exhibition­s will be the first at the NLS since the institutio­n on Edinburgh’s George IV Bridge closed its doors for the first time due to Covid-19 in March, 2020.

Both exhibits focus on intrepid explorers, adventurou­s ambassador sand overall rebels against convention, ground breaking women of the 19 th and 20th centuries.

Paula Williams, curator of "Petticoats and pinnacles: scotland’ s Pioneering Mountain Women ", said :" w he ni became the curator of maps and polar collection­s ten years ago, it wasn’t long before I was asking – 'where are all the women?'

"The library has extensive collection­s of material documentin­g pioneering mountainee­rs, and I found that, historical­ly, women’s achievemen­ts were at best ignored, at worst vilified.

"This exhibition is the result of considerab­le research into Scotland’s first known women mountainee­rs, and I am delighted to finally present this to the public. "These women defied social convention and overcame considerab­le obstacles in their quest for adventure. Many of them were also celebrated poets, diarists and artists -all inspired by the breath-taking landscapes of Scotland, as well as the Alps, Himalayas, the Rockies and Yosemite. Some of their work will be on display alongside their epic stories."

The characters range in date from a young woman who climbed Ben Lomond in 1760 - and was home in time for tea without appearing tired–to the first all-female expedition to the Himalayas in 1955, with a supporting cast up to the modern day.

Well-known names such as Nan Shepherd, Isobel Wylie Hutchison and Isabella Bird sit alongside less familiar names such as Evelyn Mcnicol, Una Cameron, Constance Frederic a gordon cum ming, jane inglis Clark and Jane Duncan.

The Collection­s in Focus display, "The Eye of a Stranger: Henrietta Liston’s Travels ", celebrates the botanist and prolific travel writer who accompanie­d her husband Robert Liston to Constantin­ople, following his appointmen­t as british ambassador to the Sublime Port e-the Ottoman Court at Constantin­ople.

Neither had aristocrat­ic or diplomatic origins, but the influentia­l couple navigated circles that included presidents, writers and monarchs.

Her diaries range from the couple's arrival in Constantin­ople in a "little flotilla" paid for by the sultan Mahmud II and their welcome by a" great crowd - male and female, of Turks, Greeks, Jews and Christians", to her first taste of a kebab.

 ??  ?? ↑ Exhibition­s are returning to the National Library of Scotland for the first time in 15 months
↑ Exhibition­s are returning to the National Library of Scotland for the first time in 15 months

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