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Gypsies: An English History
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Images, Identities, and Imaginations
1: European Wanderers: Origins, Arrivals, and Proscriptions
2: The Rambling Roguey Gypsies of the Early Modern Page
3: Tudor Gypsies Against the Law
4: Gypsies and Counterfeits in Elizabethan England
5: Gypsies in Stuart England
6: The Trials and Travels of Eighteenth-Century Gypsies.
7: Reformers and Enthusiasts in the Early Nineteenth Century
8: Victorian Encounters
9: Travels and Troubles in Modern Britain
10: Lives and Livelihoods
Scholars and Gypsies: A Bibliographical Sketch
Bibliography

About the Author

Born and educated in England, David Cressy has made his career in the United States, as a college and university teacher and a prolific author of studies in social history. His work is driven by curiosity about the interactions of elite and popular culture, mainstream and marginal society, and official and unofficial religion. He is currently George III Professor of British History Emeritus at Ohio State University, and Research Professor in Arts and Humanities at
Claremont Graduate University, California. A frequent visitor to the United Kingdom, he may also be found exploring the beaches and deserts of the American West.

Reviews

Gypsies in England from their arrival five centuries ago to recent times can only be followed through literary sources with various shades of demonizing or romanticizing agenda, or through legal records. Both sources are here explored to a groundbreaking extent. ... His re-examination of the widely reported 1753 trial of Mary Squires is particularly successful in getting behind the stereotypes to find clues to lived experience.
*Frank Bruce, Times Literary Supplement*

For all the challenges of the subject, Cressy does a good job in telling his story... Cressy in an academic historian, rather than a 'popular' one. This is reflected in the style which is crisp and efficient. He avoids the pitfalls of cliche that beset more sensationalist historical writing. Nonetheless, this is an accessible book, which gives us a sympathetic narrative of a people who are very much part of the English story. For that, it is immensely welcome.
*History Today*

... lively, argumentative, well-rounded, wide-ranging book ... a well-balanced stance and, although broadly sympathetic, avoids special pleading. It is a qualitative not a quantitative study ... Its coverage, both in terms of its five-century chronological sweep and the breadth of its subject matter, is unquestionably impressive ... With his latest book, this exceedinly prolific historian seems certain to have yet another success on his hands.
*R.C. Richardson, Times Higher Education*

A brilliantly varied and indeed monumental history... The book, handsome at 411 pages, considers Gypsies across the ages in Britain, but not without a generous international, comparative perspective early on.
*Richard Lofthouse, Quad*

Excellent new book... Wide-ranging and imaginative. It is founded on solid research and will be essential reading for anybody with a serious interest in Gypsy history.
*James Sharpe, Literary Review*

In his magnificent book David Cressy shows that it is possible to mine new meanings from old sources if you're prepared to read "against the grain".
*Kathryn Hughes, Guardian*

Gypsies have been described as a people without history, but David Cressy has made sure that this is no longer the case. He traces the community from first arrival in the 1500s to today's glossy TV shows and dirty evictions, with a lively eye for personal stories and a professional richness of documentation.
*Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine*

The source materials the author uses are diverse and extensive; the bibliography is a goldmine for historians working in Romani Studies ... eminently readable.
*Ann Ostendorf, Romany Studies*

An outstanding study of a much-maligned minority... [Cressy] has produced a scholarly masterpiece... Gypsies is a work of objective scholarship. It is also a colossal achievement, gathering thousands of shreds of evidence from a vast span of sources to trace the fates of English Gypsies from their first arrival among us until now... The Council of Europe decreed in 2010 that the word "Gypsy" must no longer be used, because of its "negative paternalistic stereotypes". Roma and traveller are acceptable alternatives. Cressy, however, defintely uses "Gypsy" with a capital G througout, and his scholarly masterpiece is a lifeline to the true past.
*John Carey*

It is wonderful to have a comprehensive and up-to-date history of this important and topical subject, by a practised and talented historian, which does full justice to both its primary records, and its intrinsic colour and excitement.
*Ronald Hutton*

An immensely readable pantechnicon of Gypsy lore.
*Christina Hardyment*

An important and illuminating account of a marginalized and itinerant people. Richly detailed, confidently written, and clear in its central mission, this book will prove to be an important departure point for all scholars looking to consider histories of marginal peoples in England and elsewhere.
*David Hitchcock, Journal of British Studies*

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