Arabian Society in the Middle Ages: Studies From The Thousand and One Nights


Book Description

"Arabian Society in the Middle Ages: Studies From The Thousand and One Nights" by Edward William Lane is a useful supplement to the 1,001 Arabian Nights volumes. Religion, demonology, the saints, magic, cosmology, literature, feasting and holidays, childhood and education, women's culture, slavery, and the ceremonies of death are all described in a concise way to allow readers to learn about this fascinating corner of the world.




Arabian Society Middle Ages


Book Description

First Published in 1995. Published a few years after the author’s death this text offers explanatory notes for his translation of The Thousand and One Nights. The editor Lane had utilized as the main basis for this the Arabic text printed at the press of Biilaq in the suburbs of Cairo established by the Pasha Muhammad 'Ali, but had enriched it by a copious commentary. Since the stories making up the Nights illustrate almost the whole gamut of public and settled domestic life in the Arab Middle Ages, from the opulent surroundings of Caliphs and Sultans to the humblest dwellings of petty tradesmen and bazaar artisans, Lane was able to construct on these foundations a remarkably detailed picture of society as it functioned in the urban centres of Mediaeval Islam.




A Poet's Sketch-book


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Princess Napraxine


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Reproduction of the original: Princess Napraxine by Louise de la Ramée




The Choice Humorous Works, Ludicrous Adventures, Bons Mots, Puns, and Hoaxes of Theodore Hook


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This is a collection of the greatest satirical works and humoristic writings from Theodor Hook. The book includes the extensive biography of this great comic writer. Hook (1788 - 1841) was a popular Englishman of letters, a composer, and briefly a civil servant in Mauritius. He was most famous for his practical jokes.













Mary Jane's Memoirs


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