[MR] medieval gypsies (Fwd: Aoife-Links Digest, Vol 8, Issue 1)

SNSpies at aol.com SNSpies at aol.com
Mon May 2 16:05:49 PDT 2005


 
In a message dated 5/2/2005 1:00:25 PM Eastern Standard Time,  
aoife-links-request at scatoday.net writes:

Today's  Topics:

1. A Motley Crew: Medieval Gypsies  (Aoife)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message:  1
Date: Sun, 1 May 2005 16:33:07 -0400
From: "Aoife"  <aoife at scatoday.net>
Subject: [Aoife-Links] A Motley Crew: Medieval  Gypsies
To: <aoife-links at scatoday.net>
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Content-Type:  text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
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Greetings My Faithful Readers!

This week's  Links List is about what we'd commonly call Gypsies, those of 
several  races who call themselves by many other names and who speak several  
different languages. Some are nomadic, some are settled.  What unites  them 
is their love of music, color, fun, and their own  culture.

This links List was inspired by the questions of a new member  in my home 
group who wanted information about the Rom. I hope this list  comes in handy!

As always, please feel free to pass this Links List  along to those who will 
find it  interesting!

Cheers!
Aoife

Dame Aoife Finn
m/k/a Lisbeth  Herr-Gelatt
Riverouge
Endless Hills
Aethelmearc

If you wish to  correspond with Aoife directly, please send mail to: mtnlion 
at ptd dot  net

Gypsies, a Persecuted  Race
http://www.chgs.umn.edu/Histories__Narratives__Documen/Roma___Sinti__Gypsies_/
Gypsies__A_Persecuted_Race/gypsies__a_persecuted_race.html
(Site  Excerpt) William A. Duna is an American Gypsy descended from Hungarian 
 
musicians who emigrated to the U. S. in 1893. He continues to be active in  
the music field as a teacher, writer, performer and entertainment  
consultant. He is the director of Basipen, the Society for the  Preservation 
of Gypsy Music. Dr. Ian Hancock is a British-born Gypsy.  besides teaching 
full time at the University of Texas, lie is the U. S.  representative to the 
United Nations from the World Romani Union. He has  authored many works about 
Gypsies and is a leading authority on the Romani  language.  Mr.Duna and Dr. 
Hancock have both directed efforts to  obtain recognition of the persecution 
of Gypsies in the Holocaust and  throughout history. In the present day they 
continue to actively pursue  Gypsy civil rights.

The Medieval England  Gypsie
http://www.comm.unt.edu/histofperf/christiwells/introduction_page.htm
(Site  Excerpt) The first recorded transfer of Romani slaves took place in 
1385  (Kenrick, 1998). By the end of the 14th century, gypsies were being  
treated as slaves in Romania, with fewer rights than the serfs in that  
families could be split up and the members sold or given away as gifts.  
Fifteenth century gypsy immigrants told the authorities they had come from  
the Turkish-controlled Middle East. It is rumored that the first gypsies  
came to England around 1480 (Kenrick, 1998). The first written record,  
however, dates from 1514 and refers to a fortuneteller while further  
references occur between 1513 and 1530.

Religion and Culture of the  Roma
http://www.religioustolerance.org/roma.htm
(Site Excerpt) The Roma  people originally lived in north west India, and 
migrated to Persia from  224 to 642 CE. They lived under Arab rule in the 
Middle East from 642 to  900 CE, and eventually arrived in Constantinople. 17 
Some authorities  believe that there may have been additional migrations at a 
later date. By  the 14th and 15th centuries, they had drifted into western 
Europe. Some  emigrated from Europe to the US and Canada in the 19th and 
early 20th  centuries. Following World War II, and lately the fall of 
Communism in  Eastern Europe, there has been an additional westward 
migration. Most Roma  settle down in a single location. Only about 5% of 
European Romanies are  believed to be nomads.

Irish Travellers (a seperate race from what we'd  traditionally call Gypsies, 
who lead a remarkably similar  lifestyle)
http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/collections/gypsy/travell.htm
(Site  Excerpt) The Gypsy Collections at the University of Liverpool include 
some  material relating to Irish Travellers. As with the rest of the  
Collections, this material mostly dates from the first half of this  century. 
The Archives of the Gypsy Lore Society also include the original  research 
carried out around the turn of the century by John Sampson and  others into 
the Travellers' language, Shelta.

Wagons, caravans,  vardos
http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/collections/gypsy/wagons.htm
(Site  Excerpt) The Romany Gypsies seem to have taken to the wagon or vardo 
about  the middle of the nineteenth century. George Borrow writing in his 
Romano  Lavo-Lil, which he finished in 1873, says that the caravans were not 
very  numerous on the roads at this stage and it is true that many Gypsies  
continued to live in bender tents right up to the end of the century. The  
Gypsy style of wagon was certainly in vogue however, even as early as 1840  
when Charles Dickens described Mrs. Jarley's van with its bed, stove,  closet 
or larder and several chests (Old Curiosity Shop, ch.  xxvii):

Gyspy Collections, Archives and  Museums:
http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/collections/gypsy/othercol.htm
A  collectin of 33 contacts for organizations that have or hold information  
about Gypsies.

Belly Dance Origins:
Gypsies: The Wandering  Artists
http://www.belly-dance.org/gypsies.html
The site is  copy-protected, however the article is well thought out and  
informative.

Jaysalem Ayo! (A film about Gypsy  root-tribes)
http://www.artnetwork.com/Jaisalmerayo/

Latcho  Drom
http://latchodrom.org/
(Site Excerpt) This is to be a place where  all those interested in 
developing an accurate period Romani persona  within the Society for Creative 
Anachronisms, Inc. (SCA). What we hope to  do here is collect information and 
documentation to help someone new to a  Romani persona to research and 
develop an accurate portrayal, negating the  myths and stereotypes of the 
Romani people.

Gypsy Lore  Society
http://www.gypsyloresociety.org/
(Site Excerpt) The Gypsy Lore  Society, an international association of 
persons interested in Gypsy and  Traveler Studies, was founded in Great 
Britain in 1888. Since 1989 it has  been headquartered in the United States. 
Its goals include promotion of  the study of Gypsy, Traveler, and analogous 
peripatetic cultures  worldwide; dissemination of accurate information aimed 
at increasing  understanding of these cultures in their diverse forms; and 
establishment  of closer contacts among scholars studying any aspects of 
these  cultures.

Gypsies and Fortune-Tellers (Note: Contains words and images  of historical 
biggotry towards Gypsies, and while citing references, it  will none the less 
offend some  readers)
http://ilaria.veltri.tripod.com/gypsies.html
(Site Excerpt)  "This page is intended to give easy access to the various 
pictures of  Gypsies and other counter-culture peoples. I make no claims as 
to the  authenticity of any of the "gypsies" portrayed herein."

Stefan's  Florilegium:
Gypsie's Art:  http://www.florilegium.org/files/CULTURES/Gypsies-art.html
Gypsies-msg:  http://www.florilegium.org/files/CULTURES/Gypsies-msg.html
Timeline of the  Roma:  
http://www.florilegium.org/files/CULTURES/Gypsy-tmeline-art.html

Brief  History of the Czech  Roma
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~mdohnalo/third%20level/Briefhistory.html
(Site  Excerpt) During the Medieval times they slowly spread around the 
Middle  East, Mediterranean and consequently to Europe. The exact time, when 
Roma  came to the Czech lands is not known, but the earliest estimates come 
to  the mid 13th century. In those times they were quite popular known to the 
 
local habitant especially by their distinctive culture and more over by  
their nomadic way of life. In the earlier Medieval Age they were  considered 
as a penitent Christian Pilgrims and generally well accepted,  although never 
really integrated into local population mostly because of  their own close 
community life style and cultural differences.

SCA  Rom Households with Web Pages:
Kumpania Copper  Lantern
http://www.geocities.com/gypsy_sabine/
Website of a Lochac Gypsy  Household
Kumpania Painted  Wheel
http://www.paintedwheel.com/
Kumpania del Chatro  Trandofir
http://www.geocities.com/trandofir/
Clan  Stravnos
http://www.geocities.com/vicolstravnos/
Kumpania  Ven Droma
http://www.enslin.com/rae/vendroma/
Kumpania De  Phralmulo
http://hometown.aol.com/wndlady/
Kumpania  Wintersteppe
http://westwood.fortunecity.com/armani/208/vitsa.html

MY  FRIENDS, THE GYPSIES
By Lawrence  Bohme
http://www.xmission.com/~dderhak/monte/gypsies.htm
(Site Excerpt)  We now know that the gypsies originated in the Punjab in 
northwestern  India, fleeing from the region during the clashes between 
invading Arab  and Mongolian warriors, a thousand years ago. On their long 
odyssey, they  travelled through, and settled in, the countries of the Middle 
East,  including Persia and Egypt.

SCA Gypsy yahoo  group
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SCA_Gypsy/






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