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Land and Trade in Early Islam discusses the latest developments in the field of early Islamic economic and social history, and explores the notion of polycentrism and the dialectic between global and local between 700 and 1050 CE. The volume explores the political mechanisms and the role of Islamic states in regulating and developing demand in the economy. The chapters question the binary of core/periphery, and demonstrate how the growing scholarship on the liminal regions of the Caliphate has transformed our understanding of the early Islamic world by offering a more nuanced picture of its regional urban and socio-economic dynamics. Changes in the peripheries of the early medieval Caliphate have traditionally been conceived as resulting from initiatives by the core. An increased focus on the comparatively under-explored regions in central Asia, north Africa, south-east Asia and the Caucasus has thrown this into question. Land and Trade in Early Islam draws on this growing body of scholarship to question the notion of peripherality, explore lines of economic influence and interdependence, and to better understand the regional economic, social and political dynamics of this period.
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The Rustamid Imamate (777–909 ce) is still considered the symbol of a vanished Golden Age and the model for an anti‐absolutist and collegial form of government by today's Ibadis. It was also one of the first autonomous Islamic states in North Africa and its capital, Tâhart (northwestern Algeria), achieved prosperity during the 9th century thanks to its pioneering role in trans‐Saharan trade.
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At first sight, North African Ibāḍism emerged during the Berber uprisings against Umayyad and ʿAbbāsid rule and stayed at the margins of the empire. The imamate of Tāhart even stood, in the posthumous memory of the school, as an ideal counter-model of the caliphate. In fact, during the 8th and 9th centuries western Ibāḍism remained under the influence of its eastern strongholds, in particular Baṣra where the sectarian elite was well integrated into ʿAbbāsid culture. Intense scholarly exchange linked west and east thanks to intermediary meeting points like Mecca and Fusṭāṭ. The Ibāḍī political opposition of ‘Berber’ and ‘Arab’ ethnicity certainly worked against the imperial discourse, but the Persian shuʿūbiyya shaped it. The Rustamid imamate came to be the symbol of a Persian state in a Berber milieu and its capital and state apparatus underwent a gradual orientalization. Trade also played a key role in connecting the Ibāḍī network with the empire. Baṣra was a notorious emporium and Ibāḍī merchants circulated widely between the ʿAbbāsid realm and its western fringes. The Maghribīs owned stores in Fusṭāṭ and traveled as far as Baghdad and Sāmarrāʾ. Trans-Saharan trade, including slaves and gold, also presumably saw its first development thanks to imperial demand.
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مفهوم دولة القانون و أبعاده السياسية، الإجتماعية و التاريخية ...
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Face à une mondialisation souvent perçue comme vecteur d’une domination occidentale, la religion musulmane nourrit, en plusieurs régions du monde, des postures de rebellions qui militent, au nom de la légitimité divine, pour un contre-projet social et moral. Que disent les sources de l’islam de l’autorité légitime et de sa contestation ? L’histoire des communautés musulmanes est-elle plus particulièrement riche en révoltes de nature religieuse en comparaison de celles d’autres aires culturelles? L’Islam aurait-il, contrairement au bouddhisme et au christianisme, refusé de renoncer à la violence durant son âge d’or ? L’islamisme combattant est-il l’héritier d’une longue tradition de justes révoltes ou le simple avatar d’une modernité politique instrumentalisant un passé déshistoricisé ? Peut-il fournir la grammaire d’un véritable projet alternatif ? Ou bien est-il pour ses thuriféraires le simple habillage de conflits d’autre nature et pour l’Occident le lieu des peurs nécessaires de son ordre établi ? Telles sont les questions dont débattront les participants à cette table ronde, historiens de la longue durée ou du temps présent, tous spécialistes d’aires culturelles différentes du monde musulman.
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