"an engaging tour-de-force of temporal political and policy practice across diverse localities . . . Taylor presents a subtly nuanced picture of European Roma, showing the everyday lived reality of complex community relations, the impact of inter-marriage and personal contacts, which alleviate what could appear to be a relentlessly grim picture of centuries of bureaucratic and legislative oppression . . . this book is highly suitable for the general reader and students alike, who require a clear grasp of the post-Enlightenment spread of nationalism and the impacts of changing political regimes on populations who are outside normative constructions of the good citizen" - History Today"Becky Taylor achieves something quite brilliant here . . . What is particularly good is Taylor’s highlighting of the discrepancies between rulers edicts and legislation, and the clues she has unearthed about the realities of everyday practices . . . Taylor does not shy away from detailing the devastating effects of anti-Gypsy policies and practices . . . Thanks to the greater availability of relevant documentation at the point in the historical record, Taylor is able to offer more direct quotes from Roma people themselves, adding depth to the narrative." - Times Higher Education"In this fine book, the historian Becky Taylor delivers a dramatic sweep of the struggles of travellers and gypsies to survive and the diverse forms of pernicious, and at times murderous and extremist prejudice mobilised against them. The book develops an impressive and compelling longue durée history of gypsies and travellers, combined with detailed histories of recent experiences and contexts . . . this ambitious and passionate book makes a strong claim for the importance of understanding the persistent struggles of Gypsies and travellers to survive. It also demonstrates that paying attention to the ways in which they have done so can illuminate broader processes of state formation and the constitutive spatial violences at their heart." - Journal of Historical Geography"In this ambitious book, Becky Taylor follows Romany people from their roots in the East to show how they become established in the West and beyond. She also looks at Europe’s other ethnic Travellers, and weaves a gripping story of their part in the continents history. What sets Taylor’s work apart is that wherever possible, she names the individual Gypsy and Traveller people in history . . . much of the book comes from the mouth of the people themselves, rather than just being another historian’s view. It's essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the history behind how Gypsies and Travellers live today" - Travellers Times