Narrow your search

Library

KU Leuven (1)

UCLouvain (1)

UGent (1)

ULiège (1)


Resource type

book (2)


Language

English (2)


Year
From To Submit

2021 (1)

2017 (1)

Listing 1 - 2 of 2
Sort by

Book
The Late Antique World of Early Islam : Muslims among Christians and Jews in the East Mediterranean
Author:
ISBN: 9783959941280 3959941285 Year: 2021 Publisher: Berlin : Gerlach Press,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This book offers a number of innovative studies on the three main communities of the East Mediterranean lands--Muslims, Jews and Christians--in the aftermath of the seventh-century Arab conquests. It focuses principally on how the Christian majority were affected by and adapted to their loss of political power in such arenas as language use, identity construction, church building, pilgrimage, and the role of women. Attention is also paid to how the Muslim community defined itself, administered justice, and regulated relations with non-Muslims. This book will be important for anyone interested in the ways in which the cultures and traditions of the late antique Mediterranean world were transformed in the course of the seventh to tenth centuries by the establishment of the new Muslim political elite and the gradual emergence of an Islamic Empire.


Book
A History of Muslims, Christians and Jews in the Middle East
Author:
ISBN: 9780521769372 9780521186872 9781139028455 0521186870 052176937X 1108156460 1108155413 1139028456 Year: 2017 Volume: 6 Publisher: Cambridge: Cambridge university press,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Across centuries, the Islamic Middle East hosted large populations of Christians and Jews in addition to Muslims. Today, this diversity is mostly absent. In this book, Heather J. Sharkey examines the history that Muslims, Christians, and Jews once shared against the shifting backdrop of state policies. Focusing on the Ottoman Middle East before World War I, Sharkey offers a vivid and lively analysis of everyday social contacts, dress, music, food, bathing, and more, as they brought people together or pushed them apart. Historically, Islamic traditions of statecraft and law, which the Ottoman Empire maintained and adapted, treated Christians and Jews as protected subordinates to Muslims while prescribing limits to social mixing. Sharkey shows how, amid the pivotal changes of the modern era, efforts to simultaneously preserve and dismantle these hierarchies heightened tensions along religious lines and set the stage for the twentieth-century Middle East.

Listing 1 - 2 of 2
Sort by