This volume is less about the Roma themselves than about European imaginings and prejudice toward them. This approach is necessary because the Roma, as a nomadic people with a primarily oral culture, have left few traces for historians. What information we have about them comes from outsiders. From very early on, myth, confusion and prejudice soaked these accounts. The Roma's image was framed and defamed first by medieval chroniclers and rulers' decrees, and later by 18th-century anthropologists, 19th-century ethnographers and early 20th-century criminologists and ruthless racial pseudoscientists.
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Europe and the Roma: A History of Fascination and Fear
by Klaus-Michael Bogdal Allen Lane, 608 pages, £40
From the start, the newcomers were swathed in mystery. Nobody - not even the Roma themselves - knew from whence they came. Their dark complexions led some to assume that they were Tatars, or from Africa. The derogatory English term 'gypsies' derives from the early rumour that they were Egyptians, condemned by God to wander. By 1800, anthropologists had realised that their language was related to Sanskrit, making India the most plausible place of origin. The Roma people's misfortune, this book argues, was to reach Europe just as it embarked upon a tumultuous path toward modernity. Their way of life was p...