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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
December 2024
Print publication year:
2024
Online ISBN:
9781009384308
Creative Commons:
Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC Creative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses

Book description

The success of Islamic imperialism in the period from the conquests to the Ayyubid dynasty has traditionally been explained as purely the result of military might. This book, however, adopts a bottom-up approach which puts social relationships and local power dynamics at the centre of the Islamic empire's cohesion. Its chapters draw on sources in diverse languages: not just Arabic, but also Greek, Coptic, Syriac, Hebrew, and Bactrian, showing how different linguistic communities intersected and contributed to a connected yet diverse empire. They highlight how not just literary and historical texts, but also physical documents and archaeological evidence should be incorporated into writing histories of the late antique and early medieval Middle East. Social institutions and relationships explored include oaths; petitions, decrees, and begging letters; and financial frameworks such as debt and taxation. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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Contents

Full book PDF
  • Frontmatter
    pp i-iv
  • Contents
    pp v-vi
  • List of Illustrations
    pp vii-ix
  • List of Tables
    pp x-x
  • List of Contributors
    pp xi-xiv
  • Notes on Transliteration, Place Names, Dates, Editions, and Translations
    pp xv-xv
  • Acknowledgments
    pp xvi-xvi
  • Introduction: The Ties that Bound the Societies of the Islamic Empire
    pp 1-26
    • By
  • Part I - Personal ties
    pp 27-28
  • 1 - Ties of Unfreedom in Late Antiquity and Early Islam: Debt, Dependency and the Origins of Islamic Law
    pp 29-59
    • By
  • 4 - Aloneness as Connector in Arabic Papyrus Letters of Request
    pp 127-149
    • By
  • 5 - Swearing Abū al-Jaysh into Office: The Loyalties of Ṭūlūnid Egypt
    pp 150-172
    • By
  • Part II - Institutions
    pp 173-174
  • 7 - The Epistolary Imamate: Circular Letters in the Administration of the Shiʿi Community
    pp 206-231
    • By
  • 8 - Early Arabic Decrees on Papyrus from the Abbasid Period
    pp 232-257
    • By
  • 10 - Between the Arabs and the Turks: Household, Conversion and Power Dynamics in Early Islamic Bactria
    pp 297-326
    • By
  • Part III - Communities
    pp 351-352
  • 13 - Rulers, Ḥanābila, and Shiʿis: The Unravelling Social Cohesion of Fourth/Tenth-Century Baghdad
    pp 381-400
    • By
  • 17 - Tied to Two Empires: The Material Evidence of the Islamic Conquest of Sicily
    pp 481-512
    • By
  • Index
    pp 513-522

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