The Golden Trade of the Moors, Second Edition

$20.00

E. W. Bovill, Revised with additional material by Robin Hallett, 1968, Oxford Univ Press, 291 pages with index, hardcover.

Very good condition, pages clean and bright, binding tight, dust jacket clean, protected with acetate cover, owners address on first page.

“This book is the liveliest account of African history ever written, covering over [one] thousand years of trans-Saharan trade. “Finely written and researched. … This edition will no doubt whet the appetites of a fresh generation of scholars and students for greater knowledge of parts of Africa still surprisingly little-known to the outside world.” ― Journal of Islamic Studies “A unique source book.” – The New York Times “Utterly enthralling … splendidly romantic.” ― The New Yorker

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E. W. Bovill, Revised with additional material by Robin Hallett, 1968, Oxford Univ Press, 291 pages with index, hardcover.

Very good condition, pages clean and bright, binding tight, dust jacket clean, protected with acetate cover, owners address on first page.

“This book is the liveliest account of African history ever written, covering over [one] thousand years of trans-Saharan trade. “Finely written and researched. … This edition will no doubt whet the appetites of a fresh generation of scholars and students for greater knowledge of parts of Africa still surprisingly little-known to the outside world.” ― Journal of Islamic Studies “A unique source book.” – The New York Times “Utterly enthralling … splendidly romantic.” ― The New Yorker

E. W. Bovill, Revised with additional material by Robin Hallett, 1968, Oxford Univ Press, 291 pages with index, hardcover.

Very good condition, pages clean and bright, binding tight, dust jacket clean, protected with acetate cover, owners address on first page.

“This book is the liveliest account of African history ever written, covering over [one] thousand years of trans-Saharan trade. “Finely written and researched. … This edition will no doubt whet the appetites of a fresh generation of scholars and students for greater knowledge of parts of Africa still surprisingly little-known to the outside world.” ― Journal of Islamic Studies “A unique source book.” – The New York Times “Utterly enthralling … splendidly romantic.” ― The New Yorker