🎁 Final Month Special: 15% OFF + Free Shipping on Most Items! Don't Miss Out - Shop Now! ✨

Shopping Cart

Sub Total: $0.00
Total: $0.00
Checkout

Search Products

In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Image 1
View Media Gallery
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Image 2
View Media Gallery
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Image 3
View Media Gallery
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Image 4
View Media Gallery
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Nav Image 1
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Nav Image 2
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Nav Image 3
In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People Nav Image 4

In Darfur: An Account of the Sultanate and Its People

$13.99 $16.00


Tags:

Africa


Categories:

Africa
Estimated Delivery:
0 people are viewing this right now
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Trust
Trust
  • Description

Muhammad al-Tunisi
Humphrey Davies (translation)
Paperback, 430 pages
English-only edition
9781479804443

 

A merchant’s remarkable travel account of an African kingdom

 

Muḥammad al-Tūnisī (d. 1274/1857) belonged to a family of Tunisian merchants trading with Egypt and what is now Sudan. Al-Tūnisī was raised in Cairo and a graduate of al-Azhar. In 1803, at the age of fourteen, al-Tūnisī set off for the Sultanate of Darfur, where his father had decamped ten years earlier. He followed the Forty Days Road, was reunited with his father, and eventually took over the management of the considerable estates granted to his father by the sultan of Darfur.

 

In Darfur is al-Tūnisī’s remarkable account of his ten-year sojourn in this independent state, featuring descriptions of the geography of the region, the customs of Darfur’s petty kings, court life and the clothing of its rulers, marriage customs, eunuchs, illnesses, food, hunting, animals, currencies, plants, magic, divination, and dances. In Darfur combines literature, history, ethnography, linguistics, and travel adventure, and most unusually for its time, includes fifty-two illustrations, all drawn by the author.

 

In Darfur is a rare example of an Arab description of an African society on the eve of Western colonization and vividly evokes a world in which travel was untrammeled by bureaucracy, borders were fluid, and startling coincidences appear almost mundane.