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After a series of short visits beginning in 2014 and ending just this week, I’m delighted to offer a preliminary catalog of Ibadi and other Arabic manuscripts held at the library of the Assoc…
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Historians interested in Ibadi and other Arabic manuscripts (including me) often treat manuscripts separately from printed materials in private libraries. But in the second half of the 19th century…
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It’s been a busy semester of classes and I haven’t had much time to write. When I saw one particular document from the British Archives today, however, I decided to make time. The docum…
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It is my pleasure to announce the upcoming public exhibition of “Conserving Endangered Archives in Jerba: the al-Bāsī Family Library Project” in Djerba, Tunisia, taking place this comin…
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I was delighted to learn this past week of an amazing new collection of digital facsimiles of Ibadi manuscripts and related newspapers from Oman, Zanzibar, and the Mzab published online by the Oman…
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Over the past several years, I have worked with private manuscript collections belonging to families in Jerba, Tunisia. The island is home to several well-known libraries, including those belonging…
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Thanks to the good folks over at Ibadica in Paris, I recently obtained a copy of the printed edition of the first Ibadi newspaper from Cairo, the Nibrās al-mashāriqa wa-‘l-maghāriba (ed. Ṣulṭ…
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[تنبيه: الترجمة العربية ستأتي بعد] Ibadis appear in surprising places—including late-20th century Jihadist literature. This post is about an unexpected use of the story of the famous 10th-century I…
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While working on an article on the history of Ibadi manuscripts at the Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale (UNO) in Naples, I ran across an interesting connection between that articl…
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I am delighted to announce the call for participants in an upcoming workshop entitled “Ibadi Manuscripts and Manuscript Cultures” to be held from 5-6 April 2019 at Al Akhawayn Universit…
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This a preliminary catalog of the Arabic manuscripts held at the Association pour la Sauvegarde de l’Île de Djerba (ASIDJ) on the island of Djerba, Tunisia. These manuscripts (bound volumes and assembled collections of fragments, representing many more titles) are all stored in acid-free boxes or folders. All items are housed in the association’s library in a former zawiya in the city of Houmet Souk. The association also has a sizeable collection of family and other documents in manuscript form that are awaiting cataloging—in case you are interested! Many of the manuscripts carry content related to the history of Ibadism (e.g. MS 013) and the history of Djerba (e.g. MS 01). For example, chronicles or legal compendia containing cases of disputes in Djerba, where there has been a sizeable Ibadi population for centuries.
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This post comes from a handful of fatwas I ran across in the famous Miʿyār al-Muʿrib of the 15th-century North African scholar Aḥmad al-Wansharīsī (d.914/1508). It turns out that this amazing colle…
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From at least the 17th century onward, a sizeable Maghribi Ibadi community lived, studied, and worked in the city of Cairo, centered around a trade agency, school, and library known as the ‘Buffalo Agency’ (<em>Wikālat al-Jāmūs</em>). Over nearly four centuries, this agency served as a hub for Ibadi intellectual activity and manuscript production. Despite its place of prominence in the history of early-modern Ibadi communities, manuscripts are some of the only surviving evidence of its existence. Using manuscript notes from and catalog data on manuscripts either held at the agency’s library or copied there, this article suggests that Ibadis were far from the small, isolated minority community in northern Africa they are often imagined to have been. Instead, the story of the Buffalo Agency points to the ways in which Ibadis very much belonged to the intellectual and commercial worlds of Sunni-dominated Cairo from the 17th–20th centuries.
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The Journal of Manuscript Studies (3:1, Spring 2018) has just published a short research annotation by my colleague Dr. Ali Boujdidi and myself, describing our project on the El Bessi (al-Bāsī) fam…
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This chapter presents the medieval history of the island of Djerba not through a chronological survey but rather through a series of overlapping landscapes: those of its Ibadi inhabitants and their communal organization, its links to the virtually invisible lines of commercial activity that crisscrossed its shores, as well as the ways in which its geography has interacted with its Ibadi communities over time. These different layers together form the uniquely Ibadi ‘islandscape’ of Djerba in the medieval centuries.
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Topic
- Bārūnī, Sulaymān al- (1870-1940) (1)
- Bibliothèques -- Djerba (4)
- Bibliothèques -- Ibadisme (1)
- Catalogue -- Djerba (2)
- Ibadisme -- Djerba (1)
- Ibn Kaydad (1)
- Manuscrits (1)
- Manuscrits -- Conservation (1)
- Manuscrits -- Djerba (4)
- Manuscrits -- Le Caire (2)
- Manuscrits -- Naples (1)
- Nukkarisme (1)
- Polémique wahhabite (1)
- Prosopographie -- Afrique du Nord (1)
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