FELLAH
Charles Gleyre, ''Three Fellahs'' (fr. ''Trois fellahs''), 1835
'Fellah' (Arabic: فلاح) (plural ''Fellahin'', فلاحين) is a peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the Middle East. The word derives from the Arabic word for ''ploughman'' or ''tiller''. During the time of the spread of Islam, it was used to distinguish between Arab settlers who were usually nomadic (i.e, ''bedouin''), and the indigenous rural population (i.e, ''fellahin'') of the conquered territories, such as the Egyptians and the Aramaeans/Syriacs of the Levant.
After the 7th-century Arab invasion of Egypt a social hierarchy was created whereby Egyptians who converted to Islam acquired the status of mawali or "clients" to the ruling Arab elite, while those who remained Christian, the Copts, became dhimmis. The privilege enjoyed by the Arab minority continued in a modified form into the modern period in the countryside, where remnants of Bedouin Arab tribes lived alongside Egyptian fellahin. One author describes the social demographics of rural Upper Egypt as follows:
''Upper Egypt comprises the country's eight southernmost governorates. ... the region's history is one of isolated removal from the center of national life. The local relationships resulting from this centuries-old condition gave Upper Egypt an identity of its own within the modern Egyptian state. Alongside the even more ancient presence of Copts, tribal groupings dating from the Arab conquest combined to form a hierarchical order that placed two [minority] groups, the ashraf and the Arab, in dominating positions. These were followed by lesser tribes, with the [Egyptian] fellah at the bottom of the social scale(28) [...] Religion was central to the development of Upper Egyptian society. The ashraf claimed direct descent from the Prophet, while the Arabs traced their lineage to a group of tribes from Arabia. On the other hand, the status of the fellahin rested on the belief that they descended from Egypt's pre-Islamic community and had converted to Islam, a history that placed them inescapably beneath both the ashraf and Arabs. [...] In Muslim as well as Christian communities, and particularly at the lower socio-economic levels, religious practices are strongly imbued with non-orthodox folk elements, some of pharaonic origin.[1]
Egyptian fellah.
| Contents |
| References |
References
1. Marginalized Violent Internal Conflict In The Age Of Globalization: Mexico And Egypt, Dan Tsczhirgi, , , Arab Studies Quarterly (ASQ), 1999 ''
2. A genius for hobnobbing Caryll Faraldi
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español



