Henrietta Liston’s Travels: The Turkish Journals, 1812-1820, eds., Patrick Hart, Valerie Kennedy and Dora Petherbridge, with F. Özden Mercan, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 2020. pp. ix-246, illustrated. ISBN 9781474467353

The history of British diplomatic wives has a lot of ground to make up. As long ago as 1975, Hilary Callan wrote a seminal study, ‘The Premise of Dedication: Notes Towards an Ethnography of Diplomat’s Wives,’1 but the topic remained a major gap. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, of course, generated a long tradition of scholarship, and Katie Hickman’s popular survey, Daughters of Britannia: The Lives and Times of Diplomatic Wives (2000) was widely reviewed and sold well.2 But the history of British women in foreign service continued to be ignored until the appearance of Helen McCarthy’s Women of the World: The Rise of the Female Diplomat (2014), her pioneering investigation of letters, memoirs, and government records detailing the lives and careers of British women serving officially and unofficially in overseas offices from the mid-nineteenth century until the present.3 It was also in 2014 that Ashley Cohen introduced historians to Maria, Lady Nugent, the American-born wife of Field Marshall Sir George Nugent, in her detailed critical edition of Lady Nugent’s East India Journal covering the years 1811 to 1815.4 Now, with the appearance of Henrietta Liston’s Constantinople Journal, 1812-1814, the field takes another leap forward.
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  • Hilary Callan, ‘The Premise of Dedication: Notes Towards an Ethnography of Diplomat’s Wives,’ in Shirley Ardener, ed., Perceiving Women, Dent, London 1975, pp. 87-104. This study was followed by Hilary Callan and Shirley Ardener, eds., The Incorporated Wife, Croom Helm, London, 1984, a collection offering sociologicalstudies of women married to colonial administrators, policemen, professors, and corporate executives.
  • Katie Hickman, Daughters of Britannia: The Lives and Times of Diplomatic Wives, Flamingo, London 2000.
  • Helen McCarthy, Women of the World: The Rise of the Female Diplomat, Bloomsbury, London 2014.
  • Ashley L. Cohen, ed., Lady Nugent’s East India Journal: A Critical Edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2014.