List of Illustrations.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction.
1. Origins.
2. Early Migrations.
3. Into the Byzantine Empire and the Balkans.
4. The Great Trick.
5. The Turn of the Tide.
6. Pressure of the Gyves.
7. Forces for Change.
8. The Approach to Avernus.
9. Modern Times.
Bibliography.
Index.
Sir Angus Fraser died on May 27, 2001, aged 73. He was Chairman of the UK Board of Customs and Excise and from 1988 to 1992 was Adviser to the Prime Minister on Efficiency in Government. He was knighted in 1985. He published extensively on the Gypsies.
"The best general book on the Gypsies." Choice.
"This is an important book. Anyone interested in Roma in this
country or elsewhere should read it." Traveller.
"Everyone has an opinion on Gypsies, and no one knows any. The
opinions are almost always bad. Unfortunately, there's more
published information available on the Martians than on Gypsies.
Into the breach comes Angus Fraser with an accessible,
well-informed introduction." Voice Literary Review.
"A particularly fascinating study, not least because of the
author's precise and engaging use of the English language ... An
absolutely essential foundation for embarking on this rapidly
growing field." Contemporary Sociology.
"An important and welcomed contribution to the study of Gypsies."
Man: The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
"The best general book on the Gypsies." Choice.
"This is an important book. Anyone interested in Roma in this
country or elsewhere should read it." Traveller.
"Everyone has an opinion on Gypsies, and no one knows any. The
opinions are almost always bad. Unfortunately, there's more
published information available on the Martians than on Gypsies.
Into the breach comes Angus Fraser with an accessible,
well-informed introduction." Voice Literary Review.
"A particularly fascinating study, not least because of the
author's precise and engaging use of the English language ... An
absolutely essential foundation for embarking on this rapidly
growing field." Contemporary Sociology.
"An important and welcomed contribution to the study of Gypsies." Man: The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
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