Part 3 Genealogies As Means for Constructing Communities
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Archives in Medieval Islam by ERNST POSNER
Downloaded from http://meridian.allenpress.com/american-archivist/article-pdf/35/3-4/291/2745727/aarc_35_3-4_x1546224w7621152.pdf by guest on 03 October 2021 Archives in Medieval Islam By ERNST POSNER N A CHAPTER of his Muqaddimah: An Introduction to His- tory, which deals with royalty and government, Ibn-Khaldun I (1332-1406) observes, "Royal authority requires soldiers, money, and the means to communicate with those who are absent. The ruler, therefore, needs persons to help him in the matters concerned with 'the sword,' 'the pen,' and finances; and among them the pen ranks high."1 It may have been thought to rank even higher than the sword and finances, for, according to Muslim tradition, the pen was the first object God created.2 Of its power and creativeness in Islamic culture there can be no doubt, and those who wielded the pen enjoyed great esteem. Poets and literati lent their talents to the business of government and, according to Ibn al-Sayrafl, achieved "with the pen what the sword and the lance over a long period of years had been unable to produce."3 Unfortunately, the use of the pen as an instrument of Muslim policy and the preservation of the products of the pen, namely offi- cial documents, have received too little attention so far. As a re- sult, archives-keeping in the Muslim states during the Middle Ages has not been fully recognized as a continuation of preceding prac- The author, Fellow and past president of the Society, continues with this essay his history of archives administration begun in Archives in the Ancient World [Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press; xviii, 283 p., illus.; bibliography, index; $>io] pub- lished in May 1972. -
Al-'Usur Al-Wusta, Volume 23 (2015)
AL-ʿUṢŪR AL-WUSṬĀ 23 (2015) THE JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST MEDIEVALISTS About Middle East Medievalists (MEM) is an international professional non-profit association of scholars interested in the study of the Islamic lands of the Middle East during the medieval period (defined roughly as 500-1500 C.E.). MEM officially came into existence on 15 November 1989 at its first annual meeting, held ni Toronto. It is a non-profit organization incorporated in the state of Illinois. MEM has two primary goals: to increase the representation of medieval scholarship at scholarly meetings in North America and elsewhere by co-sponsoring panels; and to foster communication among individuals and organizations with an interest in the study of the medieval Middle East. As part of its effort to promote scholarship and facilitate communication among its members, MEM publishes al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā (The Journal of Middle East Medievalists). EDITORS Antoine Borrut, University of Maryland Matthew S. Gordon, Miami University MANAGING EDITOR Christiane-Marie Abu Sarah, University of Maryland EDITORIAL BOARD, BOARD OF DIRECTORS, AL-ʿUṢŪR AL-WUSṬĀ (THE JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST MEDIEVALISTS) MIDDLE EAST MEDIEVALISTS Zayde Antrim, Trinity College President Sobhi Bourdebala, University of Tunis Matthew S. Gordon, Miami University Muriel Debié, École Pratique des Hautes Études Malika Dekkiche, University of Antwerp Vice-President Fred M. Donner, University of Chicago Sarah Bowen Savant, Aga Khan University David Durand-Guédy, Institut Français de Recherche en Iran and Research -
1 Volume24 Issue2 December
Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi - Cumhuriyet Theology Journal ISSN: 2528-9861 e-ISSN: 2528-987X June / Haziran 2021, 25 (1): 157-171 Mahdī with Black Banners: A close look at the Akhbār al-ʿAbbās from the Perspective of Mahdī Belief Siyah Sancaklı Mehdî: Mehdî İnancı Perspektifinden Ahbâru’l-Abbâs’a Yakından Bakış Öznur Özdemir Arş. Gör. Dr., Sakarya Üniversitesi, İlahiyat Fakültesi, İslam Tarihi Anabilim Dalı Res. Assist. PhD., Sakarya University, Faculty of Theology, Department of Islamic History Sakarya / Turkey [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0003-2379-538X Article Information / Makale Bilgisi Article Types / Makale Türü: Research Article / Araştırma Makalesi Received / Geliş Tarihi: 15 January / Ocak 2021 Accepted / Kabul Tarihi: 12 June / Haziran 2021 Published / Yayın Tarihi: 15 June / Haziran 2021 Pub Date Season / Yayın Sezonu: June / Haziran Volume / Cilt: 21 Issue / Sayı: 1 Pages / Sayfa: 157-171 Cite as / Atıf: Özdemir, Öznur. “Mahdī with Black Banners: A close look at the Akhbār al-ʿAbbās from the Perspective of Mahdī Belief [Siyah Sancaklı Mehdî: Mehdî İnancı Perspektifinden Ahbâru’l-Abbâs’a Yakından Bakış]”. Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi-Cumhuriyet Theology Jour- nal 25/1 (June 2021): 157-171. https://doi.org/10.18505/cuid.862100 Plagiarism / İntihal: This article has been reviewed by at least two referees and scanned via a plagiarism software. / Bu makale, en az iki hakem tarafından incelendi ve intihal içerme- diği teyit edildi. Copyright © Published by Sivas Cumhuriyet Üniversitesi, İlahiyat Fakültesi / Sivas Cumhuri- yet University, Faculty of Theology, Sivas, 58140 Turkey. All rights reserved. https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/cuid 158 | Öznur Özdemir. Mahdī with Black Banners: A close look at the Akhbār al-ʿAbbās … Mahdī with Black Banners: A close look at the Akhbār al-ʿAbbās from the Perspective of Mahdī Belief Abstract: The Mahdī belief had reappeared during the ʿAbbāsid Revolution as a provocative force for the masses not long after its spread in Islamic society. -
Chinggis Khan and His Conquest of Khorasan: Causes and Consequences
CHINGGIS KHAN AND HIS CONQUEST OF KHORASAN: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES BY ANIBA ISRAT ARA ARSHAD ISLAM INTERNATIONAL ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY MALAYSIA ABSTRACT This book explores the causes and consequences of Chinggis Khan’s invasion of Khorasan in the 13th century. It discusses Chinggis Khan’s charismatic leadership qualities that united all nomadic tribes and gave him the authority to become the supreme Mongol leader, which helped him to invade Khorasan. It also focuses on the rise of the Muslim cities in Khorasan where many Muslim scholars kept their intellectual brilliance and made Khorasan the cultural capital of the Muslims. This study apprises us of Chinggis Khan’s war tactics and administrative system which made his men extremely strong and advanced despite their culture remaining barbaric in nature. His progeny also followed a similar policy for a long time until all Muslim cities were fully destroyed. The work also focuses on the rise of many sectarian divisions among the Muslims which brought disunity that eventually led to their downfall. Thus, this study underscores the importance of revitalization of unity in the Muslim world so that Muslims may not become vulnerable to any foreign imperialistic power. Unity also is the key to preserve Muslim intellectual thought and Islamic cultural identities. i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS In the beginning, I would like to say that all praise is to Allah (swt) Almighty; despite the difficulties, with His mercy, and the strength, patience and resilience that He has bestowed on me, I completed my work. I am heartily thankful to my beloved supervisor to Dr. Arshad Islam, whose encouragement, painstaking supervision and tireless motivating from the beginning of my long journey to the concluding level helped me to complete this study. -
Inter-Religious Relations in a Sectarian Milieu: Fāṭimid Rulers in Relationship to Their Melkite Christian Subjects in Palestine and Egypt
INTER-RELIGIOUS RELATIONS IN A SECTARIAN MILIEU: FĀṬIMID RULERS IN RELATIONSHIP TO THEIR MELKITE CHRISTIAN SUBJECTS IN PALESTINE AND EGYPT A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of a Doctor of Philosophy in Theological and Religious Studies By Steven Matthew Gertz, M.A. Washington, D.C. August 24, 2020 Copyright 2020 by Steven Matthew Gertz All Rights Reserved ii INTER-RELIGIOUS RELATIONS IN A SECTARIAN MILIEU: FĀṬIMID RULERS IN RELATIONSHIP TO THEIR MELKITE CHRISTIAN SUBJECTS IN PALESTINE AND EGYPT Steven Matthew Gertz, M.A. Thesis Advisor: Daniel Madigan, S.J. ABSTRACT This dissertation undertakes a historical study of the Fāṭimid caliphate in Palestine and Egypt during the fourth/tenth and fifth/eleventh centuries in order to first, better understand how religious principles (ascertained through the study of law) and politics (ascertained through the study of history) interact in a sectarian milieu, and second, contribute to the study of Islamic religious identity formation as it concerns sectarianism within Islam and inter-religious relations with non- Muslims. It considers the juristic categorization (ḥukm) Fāṭimids employed regarding non-Muslims in the fiqh of the Fāṭimid jurist al-Qāḍī al-Nuʿmān, and it compares that with current research on Imāmī and Sunnī fiqh concerning non-Muslims. The study finds general agreement between Imāmīs and the Fāṭimids as to how Muslims should think about dhimmīs, with both groups placing dhimmīs in the category of mushrikūn. It also considers the relationship of Fāṭimid legal reasoning to caliphal policies during the reigns of al-ʿAzīz, al-Ḥākim, al-Ẓāhir, and al-Mustanṣir toward Christian dhimmīs, particularly those subjects living within range of Sunnī incursions and rebellions. -
IMES ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Issue 7, Summer 2016 7, Summer Issue
IMES ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Issue 7, Summer 2016 7, Summer Issue Minaret at the Bou Inania Madrasa, Fes. © Andrew Meehan From the Head of IMES Dr Andrew Marsham Welcome to the 7th issue of the IMES Alumni Newsletter, in which we con- gratulate the most recent graduates from the department. We wish all of you the very best for the future. It is also a great pleasure to welcome a new colleague to the department. Pro- fessor Jaakko Hämeen-Anttila is the new Iraq Chair in Arabic and Islamic Studies, joining us from his former role at the University of Helsinki. Professor Hämeen-Anttila has a very distinguished record as a scholar and teacher of the languages and cultures of the Middle East and we very much look forward to working with him here in Edinburgh. There is a little more about Professor Hämeen-Anttila in staff news, on page 6. Also inside, news from Ramallah, London, New York, Geneva and Kuwait by IMES students past and present, legal reform in Morocco as observed by one of our Visiting Scholars, and a new collection of translated short stories about Khartoum, in which two IMES PhD students were closely involved. As usual, there is also news of some recent and forthcoming seminars, events, projects and competitions in the department and another instal- ment of IMES history by “al-Mu’arrikh”. Very many thanks to Hester Gartrell, who has again taken on the role of assistant editor. As the incoming Head of Department, I have taken over the editorship from my colleague, Dr Tony Gorman. -
Al-Madāʾinī and the Narratives of the ʿabbāsid Dawla
AL-MADĀʾINĪ AND THE NARRATIVES OF THE ʿABBĀSID DAWLA Ilkka Lindstedt University of Helsinki This is a study on the Arabic historical narratives of the ʿAbbāsid revolution and its aftermath that occurred in 747–755 CE. Its main focus is a medieval work on these events, called the Kitāb al-Dawla, composed by an Arabic Muslim collector and composer of historical narratives, Abū l-Ḥasan ʿAlī b. Muḥammad al-Madāʾinī (d. c.228/842–843). The work is not extant, but its skel- eton can be reconstructed on the basis of later quotations of it. Al-Madāʾinī’s Kitāb al-Dawla is an important source for the events of the the ʿAbbāsid revolution: since al-Madāʾinī was not directly sponsored by the ʿAbbāsid dynasty, he was not constrained to be a spokesperson for the ruling house’s propaganda needs. INTRODUCTION This is a study on the narratives of the ʿAbbāsid revolution and its aftermath that took place in 129–137/747–755.1 Its main focus is a medieval work on these events, called the Kitāb al-Dawla, composed by an Arabic Muslim akhbārī, collector and composer of historical narratives, Abū l-Ḥasan ʿAlī b. Muḥammad al-Madāʾinī (d. c.228/842–843). The work is not extant, but can be reconstructed, to some extent, on the basis of later quotations of it. A detailed discussion of the reconstruction forms Appendix I of this study. Appendix I should be read only by those who are really interested in the question of reconstructing lost works and how the later authors quoting the Kitāb al-Dawla reworked the accounts. -
Violent Order
Violent Order © 2016 Orient-Institut Istanbul ISTANBULER TEXTE UND STUDIEN HERAUSGEGEBEN VOM ORIENT-INSTITUT ISTANBUL BAND 11 © 2016 Orient-Institut Istanbul Violent Order: Religious Warfare, Chivalry, and the ʿAyyār Phenomenon in the Medieval Islamic World D. G. Tor WÜRZBURG 2016 ERGON VERLAG WÜRZBURG IN KOMMISSION © 2016 Orient-Institut Istanbul Umschlaggestaltung: Taline Yozgatian Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar. Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de. ISBN 978-3-95650-185-2 ISSN 1863-9461 © 2016 Orient-Institut Istanbul (Max Weber Stiftung) Das Werk einschließlich aller seiner Teile ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Jede Verwertung des Werkes außerhalb des Urheberrechtsgesetzes bedarf der Zustimmung des Orient-Instituts Istanbul. Dies gilt insbesondere für Vervielfältigungen jeder Art, Übersetzungen, Mikroverfil- mung sowie für die Einspeicherung in elektronische Systeme. Gedruckt mit Unterstützung des Orient-Instituts Istanbul, gegründet von der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, aus Mitteln des Bundesministeriums für Bildung und Forschung. Ergon-Verlag GmbH Keesburgstr. 11, D-97074 Würzburg © 2016 Orient-Institut -
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Urban Studies and Public Administration Vo l . 4, No. 2, 2021 www.scholink.org/ojs/index.php/uspa ISSN 2576-1986 (Print) ISSN 2576-1994 (Online) Original Paper The Tale of Two 1001-Night Cities An Actor-Network View on the Role of Social Structures and the Motives and Intentions of Agents in Spatial Development of the Medieval Bagdad and Isfahan Arash Salek1 1 Urban and Architecture Historian, City of Rotterdam, Netherlands Received: February 16, 2021 Accepted: March 1, 2021 Online Published: March 17, 2021 doi:10.22158/uspa.v4n2p13 URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/uspa.v4n2p13 Abstract This contribution analyses the urban identity and historical patterns of spatial development in ancient Baghdad and Isfahan, according to Actor Network Theory (ANT) and Actor-Relational Approach (ARA). In the case of two different historical urban hubs (Baghdad and Isfahan). This article demonstrates how in the course of history, those interactions between various path-dependent networks have produced various, but specific types of urbanity in this region. It aims to show how ANT could clarify the embeddedness of dynamic actor-networks within the Middle Eastern urban spaces. This contribution argues that the institutional settings, customs, and use might even be more crucial for the issue of local identity, precisely because in effect they influence and shape urban living, institutions, form and infrastructures through time. Keywords post-structuralist characterization of Middle Eastern cities, Actor Network Theory, Baghdad and Isfahan 1. Introduction Many of the studies on morphology of the Middle Eastern cities deal with the materialized urban forms, (e.g., the hardware of the issue), while the software and orgware (the socio-economic use and the specific urban organization) remain largely outside the field of argument (i.e., Jayyusi et al., 2008; Elsheshtawy, 2004; Bosworth et al., 2007). -
Clifford Edmund Bosworth (1928-2015)
In Memoriam CLIFFORD EDMUND BOSWORTH (1928-2015) lifford Edmund Bosworth was a giant a biographical sketch, while weaving in amongst historians of the Middle East the highlights from his scholarly portfolio. and Central Asia, and only the likes of Above all, I want to explore what made Chis direct and indirect mentors, Vladimir Edmund—as he liked to be called—who Minorsky (d. 1966) and V.V. Barthold (d. he was: an institution unto his own, a 1930) respectively, could parallel his stag- trailblazer, and nonetheless, incredibly gering erudition and productive zeal in kind, polite, and generous in spirit, a tall, his writings on the eastern Islamic world slender man with his hallmark “unfash- and beyond it.1 Other colleagues have ionable sideburns.”3 After publishing written detailed bibliographies of Edmund Bosworth’s astoundingly prolific work, and bibliography. Ed. Ian R. Netton, Carole Hillenbrand 2 I will draw on these. In this essay, I offer and and C.E. Bosworth, Studies in Honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth (Leiden: Brill, 2000), vol. 1. C.E. Bosworth, A Century of British 1: xiii-xxxv. That list has now been boosted and Orientalists, 1902-2001 (Oxford: Oxford University updated to the present day by Michael O’Neal in “C. Press, 2001): 205. Edmund Bosworth: An Updated Bibliography,” in 2. Until now, the two-volume Festschrift this issue of al-ʿUsur al-Wusta. published in his honour fifteen years ago 3. Ian R. Netton, “An Appreciation of the Life provides the most comprehensive and accurate of Professor Clifford Edmund Bosworth,” posted Al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā 23 (2015): 167-178 In Memoriam: Clifford Edmund Bosworth hundreds of articles, twenty monographs the foundations for the next generation of and edited volumes, hundreds of confer- scholars and making more widely available ence papers, and editorial productions of the primary sources for non-specialists multi-tome compendia such as the Ency- and specialist readerships alike. -
The Appearance and Establishment of Islam in Afghanistan
Clifford Edmund BOSWORTH MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY THE APPEARANCE AND ESTABLISHMENT OF ISLAM IN AFGHANISTAN RÉSUMÉ L’article est consacré aux premiers raids arabes en Iran, d’abord contre le Séistan puis au Khorassan et en Transoxiane, ainsi qu’à la rencontre avec les Hephtalites. Les rapports avec les autres religions, comme le bouddhisme et les cultes locaux (le dieu Zhun ou Zun au Zamindawar) sont également précisés. Le rôle des Saffarides dans l’avancée de l’Islam vers l’est de l’Afghanistan est examiné, et les raids postérieurs en direction du Ghur et du Kafiristan notés. SUMMARY The paper examines the first Arab raids into Iran, at first towards Sistan and then into Khurasan and the Oxus lands, and Arab encounters with the Hepthalites there and with such faiths as Buddhism and local cults like that of the God Zhun or Zun in Zamindawar. The role of the Saffarids in extending Islam into eastern Afghanistan is examined, and sub- sequent Muslim raids into Ghur and Kafiristan noted. * * * Arab arms, and their concomitant the Islamic religion, appeared in what is now Afghanistan as the last stage in the overwhelming of the Sasanid empire, effectively achieved when Yazdagird III was driven eastwards to make a last stand at Merv in 31/651, a stand ren- dered abortive by his murder there (which gave the city, at least in Persian eyes, the opprobrious epithet of khudā-dushman "hostile to the lord"). Merv and Balkh had in fact been the northeasternmost bastions of Sasanid power, with the Ispahbadh of the Khurasanian quarter of the empire governing from the former city. -
The Analysis Ofazerbaijani Islamic Architecture During Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timuriddynasties
ISSN 2090-4304 J. Basic. Appl. Sci. Res., 2(2)1522-1527, 2012 Journal of Basic and Applied © 2012, TextRoad Publication Scientific Research www.textroad.com The Analysis ofAzerbaijani Islamic Architecture during Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timuriddynasties ShahnazFarmaniSaransari1,*, GholamHosseinMemarian2, Ya`goobAzhand3 Holds PHD in Architecture. Islamic Azad University, University of Science and Research Branch , Iran Associate Professor of science and Technology University, Iran Professor of Tehran University, Iran ABSTRACT Islam religion was developed unprecedentedly from Saudi Arabia into Middle East, the Indus River and over the north of Africa to the Atlantic Ocean in very first centuries. The intrinsic value of Islam aroused millions of people all over the world and unified various nationalities under the authority of Islam. Through exchanging science, techniques and the ancient arts of these tribes with one another, and associating them with Islam, a new era of dignity and glory appeared which was called Islamic Culture and Civilization. After that, the Islamic architecture, within thousands of years of sustained experience, and taking advantage of its high capabilities and creativities, attained in creation of valuable and splendid architectural buildings and left so many masterpieces. Considering the importance and prosperity of various arts in Iran after Islam, it’s been tried in this paper to analyze the Islamic Architecture during Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timurid dynasties, and its effects on Azerbaijan architecture. KEY WORDS: Islamic Architecture, Azerbaijan, Seljuk dynasty, Ilkhaniddynasty and Timurid dynasty. 1. INTRODUCTION After the foundation of Seljuk dynasty in the first half of the AH 5th C.(AD 11th C.), the most brilliant period of Islamic art began in Iran.