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A screenshot of my most recent article, “Manuscripts are like vampires” (History Compass, 2020), available online here: I have been super busy with a couple of grant applications for th…
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Mediterranean Seminar co-directors, Brian Catlos and Sharon Kinoshita, interview Paul Love, whose “Provenance in the Aggregate: The Social Life of an Arabic Manuscript Collection in Naples” was the Mediterranean Seminar's Article of the Month for April 2021.
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Paul Love, actuellement Assistant Professor à l’Université d’Al Akhawayn (Ifrane, Maroc), est un spécialiste de l’histoire de l’ibāḍisme médiéval au Maghreb. Dans cet ouvrage, il livre le fruit de ses recherches de doctorat. L’ibāḍisme ne cesse d’attirer de nouveaux chercheurs et les récentes publications sur l’histoire de ces groupes religieux disséminés dans les marges de l’Empire islamique témoignent de la richesse du corpus de sources à explorer. Les sources ibāḍites maghrébines, que l’on...
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This article focuses on letters in private Ibadi libraries and their importance for understanding the primary means of communication among Ibadi communities in the premodern Maghrib. Using the example of a letter from the 7th/13th-century Ibadi Shaykh Abū ʿAbdallāh al-Ṣidghiyānī from the island of Djerba (Tunisia) to the Ibadis of Warjalān (Algeria), it seeks to highlight the importance of the archive of unedited Ibadi manuscript letters. This corpus of correspondences has not received the care and maintenance it merits because these letters do not belong to a recognized volume or book and are today located in private libraries unavailable to the public. The article also uses the example of al-Ṣidghiyānī’s letter to emphasize the importance of the manuscript letters and their role in maintaining intellectual ties among the Ibadi cities of the Maghrib. This brief article consists of two parts. The first part offers a general presentation of the archive where the letter is today held: the El Barounia Library in Djerba, Tunisia. The second part presents the manuscript and its author in their historical context.</p></section>
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Typically, siyar in the Islamic tradition are biographical texts outlining the life and times of individuals, whether scholars or otherwise. Siyar are not known to offer coherent historical narratives, nor are they complete historical chronicles. They are usually compiled in an incremental manner, passing from one generation to another, creating a chain of individuals and/or communities across time and space. Despite their prominence, they have mostly served the historical profession, more or less, as biographical dictionaries. Ibadi siyar in North Africa belong to this same genre and have served a similar purpose. Paul Love’s book uses an innovative methodology in his analysis of siyar that changes the way historians can use and read these texts.
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This article examines the circulation of manuscripts in the Mzab Valley in southern Algeria during the 9th–10th/15th–16th centuries in an attempt to identify the most prominent copyists in the region. The primary aim of the paper is to highlight the importance of manuscripts for the Mzab’s Ibadi Muslim community in this period and to demonstrate its impact on the intellectual and cultural life of the region.
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Topic
- Bibliothèques -- Djerba (1)
- Bibliothèques -- Mzab (1)
- Manuscrits -- Djerba (3)
- Manuscrits -- Mzab (1)
- Manuscrits -- Naples (1)
- Nukkarisme (1)
- Numismatique (1)
- Recension (3)
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