The Primitive City of TimbuctooAmerican Philosophical Society, 1953 - 297 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 31
الصفحة 155
... living . The rate of natural increase is such that most families do not reach these non - economical propor- tions . This is the reason that foster homes are so readily found . Couples who have few children keep an eye on the offspring ...
... living . The rate of natural increase is such that most families do not reach these non - economical propor- tions . This is the reason that foster homes are so readily found . Couples who have few children keep an eye on the offspring ...
الصفحة 221
... living pattern . The cultural mechanism through which the unity of the living is perpetuated among the dead is quite simple . A man is buried near his pa- ternal kin . If none of these relatives is interred in the locale , he is buried ...
... living pattern . The cultural mechanism through which the unity of the living is perpetuated among the dead is quite simple . A man is buried near his pa- ternal kin . If none of these relatives is interred in the locale , he is buried ...
الصفحة 237
... living men being the first . When the punishing angels of God appear and ask the corpse if he is a man of God and re- ceive a negative answer , they beat the deceased with their iron rods and drag him down to the seventh hell . The ...
... living men being the first . When the punishing angels of God appear and ask the corpse if he is a man of God and re- ceive a negative answer , they beat the deceased with their iron rods and drag him down to the seventh hell . The ...
المحتوى
The Rise and Fall of Timbuctoo | 3 |
A | 13 |
The City Quarters | 43 |
حقوق النشر | |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Abaradyu 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 in-law 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