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Jacana, 2021, softcover, index, 291 pages, condition: as new.
As early as the third century, St Mauricean Egyptianbecame leader of the legendary Roman Theban Legion. Ever since, there have been richly varied encounters between those defined as Africans and those called Europeans. Yet Africans and African Europeans are still widely believed to be only a recent presence in Europe.
Olivette Otele traces a long African European heritage through the lives of individuals both ordinary and extraordinary. She uncovers a forgotten past, from Emperor Septimius Severus, to enslaved Africans living in Europe during the Renaissance, and all the way to present-day migrants moving to Europes cities. By exploring a history that has been long overlooked, she sheds light on questions very much alive todayon racism, identity, citizenship, power and resilience.
African Europeans is a landmark account of a crucial thread in Europes complex history.
This is a book I have been waiting for my whole life. It goes beyond the numerous individual black people in Europe over millennia, to show us the history of the very ideas of blackness, community and identity on the continent that has forgotten its own past. A necessary and exciting read. Afua Hirsch, author of Brit(ish)
Fascinating One of the books great pleasures is its cast of memorable characters [and] though this is a work of synthesis, its an unusually generous and densely layered one. The Guardian
A brilliant, important and beautifully written book that forces us to think about the past differently. Peter Frankopan, History Today Books of the Year 2020