Best of
Egypt

1985

The Traveler's Key to Ancient Egypt: A Guide to the Sacred Places of Ancient Egypt


John Anthony West - 1985
    The Traveler's Key explains the deeper meaning and spiritual significance of Egypt's art and architecture. This revised and updated edition includes Serpent in the Sky author West's startling evidence for redating the Sphinx.

People of the Nile: Everyday Life in Ancient Egypt


John Romer - 1985
    

Never Such Innocence


Nicola Thorne - 1985
    Harry has asked for Melanie’s hand in marriage. The Lightermans are not at all the kind of family the proud and wealthy Askhams are accustomed to marrying into, Harry’s father being a member of the ‘shopocracy’, the newly ennobled aristocracy whose fortunes are based on trade. However, Harry appears successfully to have overcome the disadvantages, in Askham eyes, of his origins. The marriage is approved and takes place hurriedly, as the Lancers are due to join the forces gathering at Omdurman, fifteen hundred miles further south and a two weeks’ journey away.But even before Omdurman, which heralds much of the misfortune that subsequently overtakes the Askham family, disaster strikes. Melanie is disenchanted with her new husband after a honeymoon on the Nile, and Lady Askham becomes the unwitting victim of blackmail because of her apparently innocent involvement with a young cavalry officer during an expedition to the desert. Lady Askham is forced to return to England to avoid disgrace, and her son Bosco, as he travels south to join the troops, vows vengeance.The way he achieves this revenge and the subsequent intrigues which follow the Askham family back to England and well into the next century form the nucleus of this engrossing novel which takes place in Egypt, the Sudan, the United States and England during the years 1898 to 1915.

Women In Nineteenth Century Egypt


Judith E. Tucker - 1985
    Focusing on lower-class women, this study traces changes in the work role and family life of peasant women in the countryside and craftswomen and traders in Cairo, and explores the world of the slave woman. The effects of capitalist transformation on women are studied in detail, using material from the Islamic court records. The effects of the Egyptian process of state formation and colonial rule are discussed: the growth of the state apparatus, its social services and repressive means, brought new kinds of intervention into women's lives. The book provides a unique account of the very active economic, social and political roles of nineteenth-century women, from the peasant and street pedlar to the slave of the harem.