The Moulids of Egypt : Egyptian saint's day festivals
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Moulids of Egypt : Egyptian saint's day festivals
Gingko, 2022
New ed
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Note
Previous edition: 1941
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book is a study of moulids, the popular Egyptian religious festivals (Muslim and Christian) as they were in the first half of the 20th century. Moulids also had a secular side, where sports, games, theatres, shadowplays, beer booths, sweet stalls, eating houses, dancing, and laughter, were as much part of the festival as the religious processions and the whirling of dervishes. Nor were the festivals exclusive to one religion or the other- Muslims and Christians happily attended each other's moulids. Some of the rites and customs date from as far back as the Pharaonic period, but the moulids are gradually dying out. Many of the 126 festivals described here have since faded away, making the book of lasting interest. Published in Cairo at the height of the Second World War, Bimbashi McPherson's The Moulids of Egypt is a fascinating and highly original contribution to the study of the country's religious folklore and practice.
Table of Contents
Contents
Editor's Comments on the Text viii
List of Illustrations ix
List of Maps xi
Editor's Note on Map Section xii
Foreword to the New Edition by Valerie J. Hoffman xiii
Foreword to the Original Edition by Edward E. Evans-Pritchard xix
Introduction 1
I Moulids: Their Origin and Objects 27
II Moulids: Their Place, Times and Seasons 35
III Moulids: Their Devotional Side 49
IV Moulids: Their Secular Side 69
V Moulids: Their Individual Features 91
Envoi 311
Post Scriptum 315
Glossary 321
Editor's Life of Author 333
Editor's Acknowledgements 373
Sources of Illustrations 375
by "Nielsen BookData"