![]() ![]() Romano Lavo-Lil: Word-Book of the Romany or, English Gypsy Language. London: John Murray, 1926.īorrow, George. The Zincali: An Account of the Gypsies of Spain. ![]() “Gypsies, the Most Feared and Fabled People on Earth Are Riding The Last Caravan.” Homemaker’s Summer 1998: 62–77.īercovici, Konrad. London: Romanestan Publications, 1984.Īrmstrong, Sally. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.Īcton, Thomas, and Donald Kenrick, eds. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. Apparently, their name was later applied to the proto-Roma who appeared in this area in the latter eleventh century or early twelfth century because both groups were nomadic and practiced “occult arts. ![]() Their history prior to this, according to established “histories of the Gypsies,” is vague, except for some Byzantine references to a people called Athinggánoi 1 or Atsingáni who were originally a sect of Persian mystics who appeared in Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire in the ninth century. They were in Spain by 1425 and most countries of Continental Western Europe around this date, and in the British Isles by at least 1500. The Romani people arrived in the Balkans from Anatolia by the thirteenth century and in the Kingdom of Hungary around 1400 at the earliest. ![]()
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