Garden of Egypt
External Review of Whole Manuscript
Irrigation, Society, and the State in the Premodern Fayyum
Abstract
Garden of Egypt: Irrigation, Society, and the State in the Premodern Fayyūm is the first environmental history of Egypt’s Fayyūm depression. The volume studies human relationships with flowing water, from the third century BCE to the thirteenth century CE. Until the arrival of modern perennial irrigation in the nineteenth century, the Fayyūm was the only region of premodern Egypt to be irrigated by a network of artificial canals. By linking large numbers of rural communities together in shared dependence on this public irrigation infrastructure, canalization introduced to Egypt a radically new way of interacting both with the water of the Nile and with fellow farmers. Drawing upon ancient Greek papyri, medieval Arabic literature, and modern comparative evidence, this book explores the ways in which the Nile’s water, local farmers, and state power together continually reshaped this irrigated landscape over more than thirteen centuries. Following human/water relationships through both space and time further helps to erode disciplinary boundaries and bring multiple periods of Egyptian history into contact with one another.
Keywords
Environmental history, Ancient history, medieval Islamic history, papyrology, Egypt, Fayyum, Nile River, Egyptian irrigation, Egyptian agriculture, Hellenistic Egypt, Roman Egypt, Ayyubid Egypt, colonial Egypt, water studies, papyriDOI
10.3998/mpub.11736090ISBN
9780472904402, 9780472133529, 9780472904402Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2024Imprint
University of Michigan PressSeries
New Texts From Ancient Cultures,Classification
Society and culture: general
Archaeology
European history: the Romans
Ancient history
History