The Primitive City of TimbuctooAmerican Philosophical Society, 1953 - 297 من الصفحات |
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النتائج 1-3 من 31
الصفحة 82
... receive for their religious and legal services and by such commerce as they may engage in - tailoring , for example ... received word that the boats had capsized during a storm and their cargoes were lost . He rushed to tell his friend ...
... receive for their religious and legal services and by such commerce as they may engage in - tailoring , for example ... received word that the boats had capsized during a storm and their cargoes were lost . He rushed to tell his friend ...
الصفحة 86
... receive them . Their power continues after death and their tombs become shrines through which their baraka can be acquired . All Timbuctoo " knows " that there are three hundred and thirty - three saints buried around the city . Many ...
... receive them . Their power continues after death and their tombs become shrines through which their baraka can be acquired . All Timbuctoo " knows " that there are three hundred and thirty - three saints buried around the city . Many ...
الصفحة 163
... receive all of the boys ' old clothes . The parents of each boy pay the barbers a franc and enough millet to provide each with a sack of grain . The next morning , after eating , the youths file to the cemetery behind the barbers and a ...
... receive all of the boys ' old clothes . The parents of each boy pay the barbers a franc and enough millet to provide each with a sack of grain . The next morning , after eating , the youths file to the cemetery behind the barbers and a ...
المحتوى
Mating | 175 |
BirthA Family Focus | 203 |
Death and Afterlife | 221 |
حقوق النشر | |
3 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Abaradyu Africa age-grade Alfa Allah Arab Arab slaves Arma Bambara baraka barbers Bela belief Berabich birth Bourem boys bride brother buctoo bush cadi Caillié camels caravan ceremony charms child circumcision cloth commercial common comrades concubine conflict corpse cowries cross-cousin culture custom Daga daughter deceased divorce Djenné economic ethnic group father feast fetish fetishist French Gabibi genii gifts girl grave grigri groom Hausa husband huts Kabara kabi kambu Keyna kola nuts kondey Koran koterey marabouts marriage married merchants Mohammed Mohammedan Moroccan Morocco Moslem mosque mother native Negro Niger parents pattern person population prayer quarter recognized relatives religious ritual robes saints salt sand Sankore serfs shea butter shereef sister slippers social society Songhoi Sonni Ali status Sudan Sudanese supernatural taboo Taodeni term Timbuctoo tion town trade traits Tuareg urban vampire vendors Westermarck wife wives woman women Yakouba