G. F. Abbott spent two years at the turn of the twentieth century studying the cultural beliefs and folklore of Greek-speaking Macedonia. His results are formulated in this 1903 book and include accounts of such varying topics as the folk-calendar, funeral rites and bird legends among many other observations. Filled with anecdotes of his adventure and reports from local inhabitants, this work is a highly engaging travelogue with many ethnographic insights. Those interested in the development of anthropology will find Abbott's study a telling example of Victorian methods while the general reader will find his prose style warm and enjoyable.
This book is a comprehensive and dispassionate analysis of the intriguing Macedonian Question from 1878 until 1949 and of the Macedonians (and of their neighbours) from the 1890s until today, with...
This book takes on the question "Who are the Macedonians?" Using three domains of evidence-historical documentation, cognitive self-descriptor reports, and sociocultural features-Damianopoulos...
Deep in the heart of the Egyptian desert lies a secret.An unknown ancient tomb that has survived intact for thousands of years. Yet only a handful of people know of its existence, and fewer of its...