Charles Montagu Doughty (born August 19, 1843, Theberton Hall, Leiston, Suffolk, England—died January 20, 1926, Sissinghurst, Kent) was a British traveler and writer who is widely regarded as one of the greatest of all Western travelers in Arabia.
Doughty attended the Universities of London and Cambridge, after which he traveled widely in Europe, Egypt, the Holy Land (Palestine), and Syria. He began his journey to northwestern Arabia at Damascus in 1876 and proceeded southward with pilgrims headed for the hajj at Mecca as far as Madāʾin Ṣāliḥ. There he studied monuments and inscriptions left by the ancient Nabataean civilization. His observations were published by Ernest Renan. On the latter part of his journey, however, which included visits to Taymāʾ, Ḥāʾil, ʿUnayzah, Al-Tāʾif, and Jiddah, he made his most important geographical, geological, and anthropological observations.
In 1888 he published Travels in Arabia Deserta, which won little recognition at the time. Eventually, however, the book came to be regarded as a masterpiece of travel writing, and it was still being published in the early 21st century. In it he was more concerned with producing a monument of what he considered to be pure English prose than with recording information. The Elizabethan style in which it is cast succeeds in conveying the feeling of his remote and lonely wandering. Doughty himself, however, attached more importance to his epic and dramatic poetry. Those works include The Dawn in Britain, 6 vol. (1906), The Clouds (1912), and Mansoul (1920).