The culture of horticulture in a unique environment
Gardens of a Sacred Landscape
Bedouin Heritage and Natural History in the High Mountains of Sinai
Samy Zalat
and Francis Gilbert
Illustrations by Ahmed Gheith
Jun 2008
304pp. Hardbound
18.00 x 23.50 cm
$39.95
LE 180.00
ISBN 978 977 416 117 9
For sale only in the Middle East
This beautifully illustrated book describes the unique environment and the natural history of St. Katherine in Sinai from the perspective of its inhabitants—the Gabaliya Bedouin. The Gabaliya live in the high and rugged mountain massif of South Sinai, enclosed within the St. Katherine Protectorate in an area now declared as a World Heritage Site. St. Katherine is one of the world’s most important protected areas for its special historical, cultural, religious, and environmental heritage. It contains Egypt’s highest mountain—Mount Katherine—and one of the world’s most sacred: Mount Sinai.
The Gabaliya have a unique history, and their intimate relationship with their harsh environment is equally unique. In the arid landscape within the great Ring Dyke they have created their own orchard agriculture, growing fruit and vegetables in irrigated walled gardens that seem to grow out of the rock on remote wadi floors or on the steep mountainsides themselves.
This book introduces—from their own observations— the gardens and the unique culture and heritage of the Gabaliya, the vegetables and fruits they grow, and the mammals, birds, lizards, and insects associated with their gardens and environment in this remarkable landscape. The book is fully illustrated with photographs and watercolor paintings.
Francis Gilbert is associate professor of ecology at Nottingham University. Samy Zalat is professor of biodiversity at Suez Canal University. Together they authored A Walk in Sinai: St. Katherine to Al Galt Al Azraq.