Description |
1 online resource (xviii, 277 pages) |
Series |
Cambridge Middle East library ; 27 |
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Cambridge Middle East library ; 27.
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Summary |
This is a revisionist study of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century rural origins of modern Egypt, dealing with the first phase of the rise of the modern state and the country's incorporation into the world economy. Professor Cuno uses previously underexploited sources - court records, fatwas, and land-tax registers - to shed new light on changes in the system of peasant land tenure, urban-rural commerce, the rural social structure, and the interplay of formal law with peasant customs and attitudes. The author challenges traditional interpretations of Egypt's past which draw too sharp a distinction between the 'Ottoman' and 'modern' periods, a distinction closely related to the notion that contact with Europe brought on the 'awakening' of the modern nation. Cuno offers a new perspective on changes introduced in the agrarian regime by Muhammad Ali Pasha (1805-48) by comparing them with the policies of earlier rulers. He also refutes the view that cash-crop agriculture, the commoditization of land, and a stratified rural society were nineteenth-century developments, showing instead that they were centuries-old features of the Egyptian countryside. The Pasha's peasants will be of interest not only to students of Egyptian and Middle East history but also to those with a general interest in issues of law and society, peasants, and the making of the modern non-Western world |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 256-264) and indexes |
Notes |
English |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Peasants -- Egypt -- History
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Land tenure -- Egypt -- History
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Land reform -- Egypt -- History
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Land reform
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Land tenure
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Peasants
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Rural conditions
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Egypt -- History -- Mohammed Ali, 1805-1849.
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Egypt -- Rural conditions
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Egypt |
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Egypt
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Genre/Form |
History
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Form |
Electronic book
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