Portrait of a boy of ... IraqPortrait of a boy of the Yam Bedouin, taken in the region between the towns of Dhahran and Najran. He has a curved dagger in his belt. Due to the nature of these images, prints will reproduce any signs of age, wear or damage that occurred before they were archived by the Pitt Rivers Museum.
a style typical of unmarried girls
In the distance behind him tufts of vegetation grow across a vast flat expanse of sand
He wears a cartridge belt over his thobe (shirt) and a headscarf topped with an 'agal (head rope)
looking at a number of people seated on the deck
Mishongnovi 'is but a short distance from [Shipaulovi]
On the left a number of dhows are moored in the background
in Al Humrah sands during the party's journey to Umm az Zumul
View of men and women dancing at a wedding ceremony
while further back a few more couched camels rest in the sand
taken from the elevated site of the castle (now destroyed) at Alamut
Three of Wilfred Thesiger's Bedouin companions lead a line of camels through a gap between sand dunes
is kneeling in the sand next to a fire