Thomas Witlam Atkinson (1799–1861) was an English architect, artist and traveller in Siberia and Central Asia. Between 1847 and 1853 he travelled over 40 000 miles through Central Asia and Siberia, much of the time together with his wife Lucy and son Alatau, who was born during their travels. He also painted and documented his travels in two books that are today regarded as travel classics.[citation needed] His and Lucy's son, Alatau Tamchiboulac Atkinson, born on 4 November 1848 in what is now Eastern Kazakhstan, was named after the famous Tamshybulak Spring in the town of Qapal at the foot of the Djungar Alatau mountains.
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ThomasWitlamAtkinson (1799–1861) was an English architect, artist and traveller in Siberia and Central Asia. Between 1847 and 1853 he travelled over...
Frederick Richard Lee (1798–1879) ThomasWitlamAtkinson (1799–1861) Samuel Atkins, marine painter John Hayter (1800–1895) Thomas Webster (1800–1886) James Digman...
General Mikhail Nikolaevich Muravyev-Vilensky. In 1846, she met ThomasWitlamAtkinson, whom she married in February 1848 in Moscow. Between 1848 and 1853...
by ThomasWitlamAtkinson, Grade II listed. The Great Synagogue (Old Congregation), Cheetham Hill Road, Cheetham (SJ 842998) was designed by Thomas Bird;...
architecture first under Walter Newall and afterwards at Manchester under ThomasWitlamAtkinson. He commenced practice on his own account in 1840, and was engaged...
was used as an invasion route by conquerors from Central Asia. Atkinson, Thomas-Witlam (1863). "Travel on the Russian-Chinese borders and in the steppes...