To undergraduates of Western origin, one of the most
alien aspects of Islamic history is the role played
in it by tribes: why did they never disappear ? To
seasoned Islamicists, on the other hand, it is the
virtual disappearance of tribes from Europe after
the age of invasions that is puzzling: why are there
no Ḥāshid and Bakīl in Switzerland ? Who could
imagine the Yemeni highlands or the Caucasus as
places renowned for banks and cuckoo clocks ? Though
tribes were prominent in many parts of Asia, they
did not play the same role in Chinese and Indian
civilisation either as they did in the Muslim Middle
East; nor is it obvious that they played the same
role in the Middle East before the rise of Islam as
they did thereafter. It is hardly surprising, then,
that Islamicists talk so much about tribes that
non-Islamicists often suffer from the misconception
that there is nothing but tribes in the Islamic
world.