
Part II.—EXTERNAL RELATIONS.
XII.— EUROPEANS IN THE MOORISH SERVICE.—Early adventurers;
Intervention of the Pope; Ripperda; Foreign Military
Missions.
XIII.— THE SALLI ROVERS.— Undeserved Glamour; Suggested Origin;
Types of Vessels; Modus Operandi; Europe Tributary; Extinction.
XIV— THE RECORD OF THE CHRISTIAN SLAVES.—Redemp-
tionists; Speculation; Ransoms; Sufferings; Life; Escapes;
Renegades; Statistics.
XV.— CHRISTIAN INFLUENCES IN MOROCCO— Unwar ranted Assumptions;
Franciscan Missipns; Moorish Sees.;.Native Martyrs;
Protestant Missions.
XVI.- FOREIGN RELATIONS.— Earliest; With England; Euan-Smith
Mission; With France, Spain, etc.; With the East.
XVII— MOORISH DIPLOMATIC USAGES— Original Custom; British
Consular Record; Strange Presents; Reception of Embassies;
Curious Incidents.
X V n i— FOREIGN RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES— Classification; Extra
Territorial Jurisdiction; Summary of Existing Rights; Sanitary
Commission; Spartel Convention.
XIX.— COMMERCIAL INTERCOURSE.— English Beginnings; Monopolies
; Concession Hunting; Location of Europeans; Protection
System; Existing Regulations.
XX— THE FATE OF THE EMPIRE.— The National Fabric; Native
Ideals; Ambition of France; English Interests; Claims of Spain;
Nature of Past Revolutions; Verbum Sap.
Part III.—MOROCCAN LITERATURE.
I.—WORKS ON MOROCCO REVIEWED— (2 13 vols. in eleven
languages).
II— THE PLACE OF MOROCCO IN FICTION— (34 vols.)
in.—JOURNALISM IN MOROCCO.
IV.—WORKS RECOMMENDED.
APPENDIX.
CLASSICAL AUTHORITIES ON MOROCCO.
Price Fifteen Shillings.
L o n d o n : S W A N SONNENSCHEIN & CO., L im ., P a t e r n o s t e r S q u a r e , E.C.
(In the Press)'
Uniform with this Volume, by the same Author.
“The Moors,”
A C O M P R E H E N S IV E D E S C R IP T IO N
CONTENTS.
Part I.—S OCIAL.
INTRODUCTION.— The word “ Moor” ; the Berbers; the Arabs;
the Moors a white race; Distribution of population; Native name
o f country.
I.— “ THE MADDING CROWD.”— A Moorish market, its din, its colours,
its constituents; A mule sale; A bargain; Trading encampment.
II.—i“ WITHIN THE GATES.” L-The City Wall; Shops, trade centres
and markets; Stores and cafés; Residential quarters.
III.—WHERE THE MOORS LIVE.— No “ homes Typical houses and
their decoration; Gardens, kitchens, furniture, receptions; Building.
IV.—HOW THE MOORS DRESS.— Suitability and elegance of costumes ;
Useful articles; Jewelry, washing, cosmetics, tattooing, soaps.
V— MOORISH COURTESY AND ETIQUETTE— Salutations; Kissing,
sneezing, yawning and complimenting; How to enjoy a joke;
Superstitions ; How to eat with the hand.
VI.—WHAT THE MOORS EAT AND DRINK.— The national dish ;
the acme of cooking; Moorish ' pastry ; Recipes for a number of
good Moorish dishes.
VII.— MOORISH DOMESTIC LIFE— Birth-feast; Names and their
meanings; Babyhood; Amusements and entertainments; Condition
of women.
v m — SLAVERY AND SERVITUDE AMONG THE MOORS— The
slave trade ; Prices and auctions ; Absence of race-hatred ; Marriage
and Manumission; Treatment; Domestic service.
IX. MOORISH COUNTRY LIFE.— Origin of Moroccan nomads ;
Encampments; Tent furniture; Villages in transition; Agriculture;
Irrigation; Pests and poverty.
X— TRADE AND TRAVEL IN MOROCCO. —Methods of business ;
Usury; Country markets and traffic; Beasts of burden; Caravan
travel; Posts; Coinage; Exports.
XI— MOORISH ART AND ARCHITECTURE— Mediseval achievements;
Origin of horse-shoe arch; Stone-work; Designs and colouring
; Leather ; Carpets ; Pottery ; Music.
■XU. MOROCCAN THERAPEUTICS.— Native classification of disease ;
Inoculation; National disease; Leprosy; Plagues; Midwifery;
Surgery; Veterinary methods.