Over 10 mio. titler Fri fragt ved køb over 499,- Hurtig levering 30 dages retur

Slavery and the Jews of Medieval Egypt

- A History

Bog
  • Format
  • Bog, hardback
  • Engelsk
  • 368 sider

Normalpris

kr. 419,95

Medlemspris

kr. 379,95
  • Du sparer kr. 40,00
  • Fri fragt
Som medlem af Saxo Premium 20 timer køber du til medlemspris, får fri fragt og 20 timers streaming/md. i Saxo-appen. De første 7 dage er gratis for nye medlemmer, derefter koster det 99,-/md. og kan altid opsiges. Løbende medlemskab, der forudsætter betaling med kreditkort. Fortrydelsesret i medfør af Forbrugeraftaleloven. Mindstepris 0 kr. Læs mere

Beskrivelse

A new global history of the slave trade, the lives of enslaved people, and the role of slavery in the formation of Jewish and Arab-Islamic culture in the medieval Middle East

In this book, Craig Perry mines a remarkable cache of fragmentary documents preserved in an Egyptian synagogue to write a new history of slavery and the slave trade in the medieval Middle East. These documents—which range from the everyday correspondence of traveling merchants to legal queries sent to Jewish jurists—provide the richest surviving archive for the social history of slavery during the centuries when Cairo was an imperial and commercial capital at the intersection of the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean worlds. Perry draws on this archive, known as the Cairo Geniza, to shed new light on such crucial topics as the slave trade in state diplomacy, the entanglements of gender and household slavery, and the lives of the enslaved.

Perry chronicles a protean slave trade that trafficked enslaved people from Europe, Africa, and India to the Egyptian market. His account cuts across different scales of analysis, from the macro-level of imperial rule to the micro-level of the family kitchen. Along the way, he upends the traditional story of Passover; medieval Jews, he writes, could explain slavery to their children by pointing to the enslaved people who served the holiday meal. When freed, some former slaves converted to Judaism and became the parents of Jewish children. Perry’s narrative reveals a world, long hidden from historians, in which enslaved people made their way through the alleys of Cairo, toiled in the workshops of apothecaries, and found ways to evade the surveillance of their owners. With this book, Perry writes enslaved people into the social and economic life of medieval Islamic society.

Læs hele beskrivelsen
Detaljer
Størrelse og vægt
coffee cup img
10 cm
book img
15,6 cm
23,5 cm

Anmeldelser

Vær den første!

Log ind for at skrive en anmeldelse.

Findes i disse kategorier...