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In the House of Muhammad Ali: A Family Album, 1805-1952

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 2000Description: xvii, 146 p., 23 cmISBN:
  • 9774245547
Subject(s): Summary: This remarkable memoir of a junior member of the former royal family constitutes a unique chronicle of life before 1952 among the members of Egypt’s ruling class. It provides fascinating insights into the lives not only of the rulers themselves, from Muhammad Ali to King Fuad and King Farouk, but also of royal wives, cousins, aunts, uncles, and associated personalities. In the House of Muhammad Ali is a personal memoir from the inside; it is thus an important document for future scholars. But the book will delight the general reader every bit as much as the historian. It is a charming and evocative account of a time and a social class that no longer exist, written in the author’s inimitable style―a style that reads almost like a conversation: "She emanated a gentle quietude which was like a screen between one and the exterior world. A dim sort of luminosity seemed to surround her, as if she lived in a gray, limbo world of her own―also conveyed perhaps by the fact that she had very poor and limited eyesight." Prince Hassan’s gift for characterization is matched by an extraordinary eye for detail. His descriptions of houses, palaces, and gardens―many of them no longer in existence―are at the same time precise and evocative. The book thus also makes an important contribution to the history of Cairene urban geography. But most valuable of all, perhaps, are the illustrations. Some seventy-five photographs, most of them never published before, have a poignancy that readily leads the viewer into the world they depict. The people in them are clearly defined, richly varied, and above all interesting. At least of equal value are the pictures of palaces, gardens, and riverfront that document aspects of Cairo that vanished long ago. The experience of reading this memoir is akin to discovering a lost generation.
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Books Books Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (NVIC) Library Main Library - 0.01 E 1377 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available E 1377
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E 1374 Economic Crisis and the Politics of Reform in Egypt E 1375 الدولة الفاطمية في مصر: تفسير جديد. الطبعة الثانية / Les Fatimides en Egypte: nouvelle interpretation. 2eme edition E 1376 إصلاح أم تحديث? مصر في عصر محمد علي. ندوة الجمعية المصرية للدراسات التاريخية بمناسبة مرور 150 عاما على رحيل محمد علي باشا الكبير, 9-11 مارس 1999 Reform or modernization? Egypt under Muhammad Ali. Symposium organized by the Egyptian Society of Historical S E 1377 In the House of Muhammad Ali: A Family Album, 1805-1952 E 1378 ندوة العرب وأوربا عبر عصور التاريخ. ندوة عقدها الإتحاد بمقره في القاهرة 1420/1999 E 138 كتاب تاريخ دولة السلجوق من انشاء الامام عماد الدين محمد بن محمد بن حامد الاصفهاني E 1380 دراسات في تاريخ الاقتصاد والاجتماع في العصر العثماني. أعمال الندوة العلمية التي أقامتها هيئة فولبرايت بالقاهرة في الفترة من 6-8 ديسمبر 1996 م

This remarkable memoir of a junior member of the former royal family constitutes a unique chronicle of life before 1952 among the members of Egypt’s ruling class. It provides fascinating insights into the lives not only of the rulers themselves, from Muhammad Ali to King Fuad and King Farouk, but also of royal wives, cousins, aunts, uncles, and associated personalities.
In the House of Muhammad Ali is a personal memoir from the inside; it is thus an important document for future scholars. But the book will delight the general reader every bit as much as the historian. It is a charming and evocative account of a time and a social class that no longer exist, written in the author’s inimitable style―a style that reads almost like a conversation: "She emanated a gentle quietude which was like a screen between one and the exterior world. A dim sort of luminosity seemed to surround her, as if she lived in a gray, limbo world of her own―also conveyed perhaps by the fact that she had very poor and limited eyesight."
Prince Hassan’s gift for characterization is matched by an extraordinary eye for detail. His descriptions of houses, palaces, and gardens―many of them no longer in existence―are at the same time precise and evocative. The book thus also makes an important contribution to the history of Cairene urban geography.
But most valuable of all, perhaps, are the illustrations. Some seventy-five photographs, most of them never published before, have a poignancy that readily leads the viewer into the world they depict. The people in them are clearly defined, richly varied, and above all interesting. At least of equal value are the pictures of palaces, gardens, and riverfront that document aspects of Cairo that vanished long ago. The experience of reading this memoir is akin to discovering a lost generation.

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