• Figure 7.17. Even though people of different means lived in different types of structures, these structures were not always in separate areas of Omani Zanzibar. (a) A typical (Arab) stone house next to huts. (Source: www.zanzibarhistory.org.) (b) The typical shopfront house of a merchant. Leigh described such shops as “mere holes raised a foot or two above the street.” (Source: www.zanzibarhistory.org.) (c) A typical street in Ng’ambo defined by single-storied Swahili houses with makuti roofs. Referring to such streets, the first Hand book of Zanzibar noted the “silence and cleanliness” of Ng’ambo. It is noteworthy that the street has a stone house at the end. (Source: The Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies Winterton Collection, Northwestern University.)

Even though people of different means lived in different types of structures, these structures were not always in separate areas of the city

From Physical Space and Spatiality in Muslim Societies: Notes on the Social Production of Cities by Mahbub Rashid

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  • Philosophy
  • Political Science:Political History
  • African Studies
  • Political Science:Political Theory
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