Despite Huber's great posthumous reputation, almost nothing has been written about him. William Facey's biographical. introduction fills this void, revealing much that was hitherto unknown about Huber's complex and risk-taking personality, and about his colourful life as a fervent French patriot coming of age in Strasbourg during a time of Franco-German conflict.
New light is shed on the dates and itinerary of Huber's first Arabian journey, an epic quest of some 5,000 kilometres on
camelback requiring immense fortitude. For this he used Ha'il as a base before travelling with the pilgrim caravan to Iraq and thence to Syria. The focus then shifts to his return to Arabia in 1883 with Julius Euting, the eminent German Semitist, and the twists and turns of their unsuccessful collaboration. Having parted company with Euting at the great Nabataean site of Mada'in
Salih in the northern Hijaz, Huber went back into central Arabia before making a dangerous journey to Jiddah. He was murdered
shortly after, on 29 July 1884, by his guides on the Red Sea coast.
Finally, the affair of the Tayma Stele, the celebrated Aramaic inscription now in the Musee du Louvre, comes under the
spotlight. In a new analysis of this notorious Franco-German imbroglio, the prevailing idea that Huber first saw it in 1880 is held up to scrutiny, and Euting at last given his due for its discovery in 1884.