The Wallachian Gold-Washers : Unlocking the Golden Past of the Rudari Woodworkers (Roma History and Culture 2) (2023. 285 S. 7 Farbabb., 1 Farbzeichn., 16 Tabellen, 5 Ktn. 235 mm)

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The Wallachian Gold-Washers : Unlocking the Golden Past of the Rudari Woodworkers (Roma History and Culture 2) (2023. 285 S. 7 Farbabb., 1 Farbzeichn., 16 Tabellen, 5 Ktn. 235 mm)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版
  • 商品コード 9783506790385

Description


(Text)
This is the first monograph on the history of the Rudari people of Romania and the first mapping of their settlements. The Rudari are a population which has traditionally inhabited the Balkan area and much of Central Europe. Many of them do not know the Romani language but speak Romanian dialects and today make a living out of carving wooden household items, although their Slavic name alludes to mining. Indeed, the Rudari were for centuries gold-prospectors and gold-washers working for the Crown of Wallachia and were administrated as slaves by a monastery situated on the auriferous Olt river. The authors have reconstructed the fascinating history of this ethnic group for a period of 500 years until the 19th century when gold-panning went in decline due to the exhaustion of the reserves of alluvial gold.

"Who are the Rudari? [...] Julieta Rotaru and David Gaunt bring considerable interdisciplinary skills to bear on this topic, and the depth of their research truly impresses." (M. Benjamin Thorne, Wingate University, U.S.A., in Slavic Review)

"This fundamental study by Julieta Rotaru and David Gaunt [...] The idea expressed by previous authors is that the Rudari originated in Transylvania from where they were thought to have spread out radially to neighbouring regions. Rotaru and Gaunt propose a Wallachian origin instead." (Leonardo Piasere, retired professor of Cultural Anthropology, University of Verona, in Romani Studies)

"[T]he book is very innovative, also because it brings new information about the country of origin of the group of Rudari (with all varieties of the names which the group has) and shows the connection of this group with other groups of Roma who came from India." (Hristo Kyuchukov, Professor, University of Silesia, Poland, in Romani Studies)
(Author portrait)
Julieta Rotaru teaches at the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales, Paris. She has a multidisciplinary approach (philology, ethnology, history) with contributions to the history of Romani communities from Romania.David Gaunt is Professor emeritus in history at the Södertörn högskola, Stockholm, with extensive research on family and household forms in a comparative European perspective and mass-violence in the late Ottoman Empire.

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