An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians
Edward William Lane (1801–76) published this work in two volumes in 1836. Resident in the country for many years, and fluent in Arabic, he devoted his life's study to Egypt. A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Institut de France, Lane translated One Thousand and One Nights and selections from the Koran. His major work was an Arabic-English lexicon; a monumental undertaking, he was working on the sixth volume when he died. Volume 2 of Modern Egyptians primarily details Cairo's vibrant public space, covering drug use, games, street music and dancers, as well as snake charmers, storytelling, celebratory festivals, and funerals. It also examines Egyptian industry and the Jewish and Copt minorities. A bestseller in its own day, this well-illustrated work remains a key text for students of nineteenth-century Egypt and the Arab world.
Product details
February 2013Paperback
9781108055246
458 pages
216 × 140 × 26 mm
0.58kg
46 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Industry
- 2. Use of tobacco, coffee, hemp, opium, etc.
- 3. The bath
- 4. Games
- 5. Music
- 6. Public dancers
- 7. Serpent-charmers, and performers of legerdemain tricks, etc.
- 8. Public recitations of romances
- 9. Public recitations of romances (cont.)
- 10. Public recitations of romances (cont.)
- 11. Periodical public festivals, etc.
- 12. Periodical public festivals, etc. (cont.)
- 13. Periodical public festivals, etc. (cont.)
- 14. Private festivities, etc.
- 15. Death, and funeral rites
- Supplement
- Index.