Leaving Iberia : Islamic law and Christian conquest in North West Africa / Jocelyn Hendrickson.
Yer Numarası
A.IX/5049
ISBN
9780674248205 (hardback)
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yazar
Eser Adının Farklı Biçimi
Islamic law and Christian conquest in North West Africa
Yayın Bilgisi
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2021.
Fiziksel Niteleme
xii, 417 sayfa ; 24 cm
Dizi
Harvard series in Islamic law, 1556-9802 ; 9
Genel Not
İndeks s. 373-413.
Bibliyografi, vb. Notu
Bibliyografya s. 353-371.
İçindekiler Notu
Leaving Iberia -- PART I. FISHING WITH THE ENEMY : ZAYYĀTĪ’S SELECTED JEWELS, CA. 1480S TO 1520S. Iberian reconquest and Crusade in North Africa -- Islamic legal resistance to Christian Conquest -- PART II. ANDALUSĪS IN AFRICA AND THE MAN FROM MARBELLA (ASNĀ AL MATĀJIR AND THE MARBELLA FATWĀ), 1491. Ibn Qaṭiyya’s questions : “Emigrate from there to here?” -- Wansharīsī's answers : authority and adaptation -- PART III. WAHRĪNĪ'S “FATWĀ“ TO THE MORISCOS, 1504. Unsolicited advice -- PART IV. CHRISTIAN CONQUEST REVISITED : FRENCH ALGERIA AND MAURITANIA, NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURIES. Algeria : hearing the News of al-Andalus -- Mauritania : challenging legal filth -- Centering the Maghrib.
Özet, vb.
“Leaving Iberia: Islamic Law and Christian Conquest in North West Africa examines Islamic legal responses to Muslims living under Christian rule in medieval and early modern Iberia and North Africa. The fall of al-Andalus, or reconquista, has long been considered a turning point, when the first substantial Muslim populations fell under permanent Christian rule. Yet a near-exclusive focus on conquered Iberian Muslims has led scholars to overlook a substantial body of legal opinions issued in response to Portuguese and Spanish occupation in Morocco itself, beginning in the early fifteenth century.
By moving beyond Iberia and following Christian conquerors and Muslim emigrants into North Africa, Leaving Iberia links the juristic discourses on conquered Muslims on both sides of the Mediterranean, critiques the perceived exceptionalism of the Iberian Muslim predicament, and adds a significant chapter to the story of Christian–Muslim relations in the medieval Mediterranean. The final portion of the book explains the disparate fates of these medieval legal opinions in colonial Algeria and Mauritania, where jurists granted lasting authority to some opinions and discarded others.
Based on research in the Arabic manuscript libraries of five countries, Leaving Iberia offers the first fully annotated translations of the major legal texts under analysis“ -- Yayıncı.
Konu
İslam hukuku__İber Yarımadası__Tarih__1500’e kadar.
İslam hukuku__Kuzey Afrika__Tarih__1500’e kadar.
İslam dini__İlişkiler__Hristiyanlık__Tarih.
Hristiyanlık__İlişkiler__İslam dini__Tarih.
Haçlı Seferleri__Kuzey Afrika.
Cezayir__Fransız işgali__19. yy.
Moritanya__Fransız işgali__20. yy.
İber Yarımadası__Müslümanlar__Tarih.
İslam hukuku__Kuzey Afrika__Tarih__1500’e kadar.
İslam dini__İlişkiler__Hristiyanlık__Tarih.
Hristiyanlık__İlişkiler__İslam dini__Tarih.
Haçlı Seferleri__Kuzey Afrika.
Cezayir__Fransız işgali__19. yy.
Moritanya__Fransız işgali__20. yy.
İber Yarımadası__Müslümanlar__Tarih.
Dizi Ek Girişi- Tek Biçim Başlık
Harvard series in Islamic law ; 9.