SOME FORMAL AND STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF EARLY ISLAMIC HISTORIOGRAPHY

2021 ◽  
pp. 255-274
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-59
Author(s):  
Georg Leube

The following are some comments by a scholar of early Islamic Historiography on the intriguing stelae of the Royal Cemetary of Gao-Saney dating from 11th / 12th century (ce) West Africa. They depart from interpretations focusing on the integration of the stelae into the literary corpus of later Arabic ta’rīkh – works dealing with West Africa by proposing a spatial reconstruction of the ensemble of the tombstones. The resulting spatial arrangement can be intrepreted as reminiscent of the topography of the burial of the Prophet Muḥammad in Medina. It is proposed that the peculiar naming pattern on the tombstones of the recently Islamicized rulers of Gao-Saney replicating the naming pattern of the first three rulers of the ideal Islamic polity of early Islamic Salvation History did not necessarily form a replica of Islamic Salvation History in life, but certainly a replica in death establishing a marker of Islamic Salvational Geography in 11th / 12th century (ce) West Africa.


1982 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elton L. Daniel

A recent burst of interest in revisionist interpretations of early Islamic and especially Abbasid history may be attributed in large measure to the availability of a number of fresh source materials, one of the most important of which is an anonymous history of the Abbasid family. A number of problems surrounding this work are still far from being satisfactorily resolved, including the questions of its title, the date of its composition, the identity of its author, and its historical and historiographical value.


1999 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven C. Judd

The meaning and significance of accusations of heresy are difficult to ascertain, regardless of the religious setting or historical milieu in which they appear. Scholars studying medieval European religious history have described heresy as opposition to the Christian church's doctrinal authority, emphasizing that heretics were not only religious but also political dissenters. They questioned church doctrine per se, but also, perhaps more significantly, challenged the church's authority to determine doctrine. In early Islamic history, concepts of heresy and orthodoxy are somewhat more difficult to define. After the Rashidun, there was no dominant religious voice in the community. Instead, a variety of opposing parties struggled for the right to define doctrine. In such circumstances, there could be no orthodoxy, since none had sufficient moral authority or coercive power to impose their views to the exclusion of all others. Consequently, there could be no heresy either, because heretics are simply those whom the dominant religious authority deems to be outside the bounds of orthodoxy. Only after proponents of a particular set of views gained sufficient power to impose their views on others could heterodoxy become heresy.


2016 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-56
Author(s):  
Arezou Azad

AbstractThis paper is a first attempt at understanding the impact of Islam on families in eighth-century rural Ṭukhāristan (modern-day northern Afghanistan), at the periphery of the late Umayyad and early ʿAbbāsid caliphate. Tukhāristan lay in the ancient region of Bactria, which became the land and city of Balkh after the Islamic conquests of the early seven hundreds ad. My analysis is based on a fascinating corpus of legal documents and letters, written in Bactrian and Arabic in the fourth to eighth centuries ad, which were discovered, edited and translated relatively recently. Scholars of Central Asia have tended to discuss the region's early Islamic history within a politico-military framework based on chronicles and prosopographies written in Arabic and/or adapted into Persian centuries after the Muslim conquests. Such narrative sources describe an ideal state defined by genres of Islamic historiography, and come with the usual menu of distortions, simplifications and exoticisms. The documents under review, on the other hand, were written to serve immediate and practical uses; the evidence they offer is devoid of rhetoric, recording aspects of life and social groupings to which we would otherwise have no access. This paper argues that during the transition to Islamic rule (c. ad 700–771), Bactrian and Islamic administrative systems co-existed, and significantly affected family life and marriage traditions. Specifically, it is suggested that the early ʿAbbāsid tax system eclipsed the age-old practice of fraternal polyandry here: more by default than by design.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-39
Author(s):  
Sohail Akhtar ◽  
Rafiq Akber ◽  
Muhammad Asim Rafiq

The history of the world began with human creation and consciousness. And with the passage of time came the expansion and innovation in historiography. The Greeks have credited with the formal beginning of historiography. Hycuts was the first person to start writing the events of history in a scattered manner. Herodotus later began the work of historiography on the basis of this effort. Herodotus was called the father of history. Similarly, historiography was transferred from the Greeks to the Romans and then the advent of Islam made historiography not just an art but an industry. Islamic historiography began during the Prophet's time when it was writing with   Quran and Hadeth. Later several people started to write the biography of Prophet and many others. Among them Imam Zahri, Muhammad Bin Ishaq, Ibn-e-Hisham, Waqdi and many others. This paper is an attempt to highlight the basic concept of historiography and Islamic contribution in historiography during the early Muslim era to 350 A.H.


1988 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-237
Author(s):  
Abdulkader I. Al Tayob

IntroductionSome idea of the past is present in every culture, and historicalconsciousness as an awareness of this past is a distinctive element in totalcultural expression. Hence, it would be a mistake to assume that there wasno historical consciousness among the Arabs predating Islam. However, itwas the religious, political and social transformation of the Arabs throughIslam that motivated an extensive interest in the past and its systematicrecording.Muslim historians developed the idea of the past they had inherited frompre-Islamic Arabia and expressed it in an extensive historical literature. Thestudy of the past in early Islamic history was motivated and determined bya number of factors. This article seeks to outline some of the importantdevelopments which led to a distinctive Islamic historiography. It seeks todo so by an examination of studies conducted on the early Islamic historicaltradition. In particular, three fundamental aspects of the different phases ofhistorical writings from pre-Islamic Arabia through the 2nd and 3rd centuriesof the Hijrah are investigated: the external form of historical recollection;its subject matter; and the meaning and significance of both the form andthe subject matter of historical recollection in the culture.1. Pre-Islamic ArabiaThe interest in the past among the pre-Islamic Arabs is best exemplifiedby the custom of evening tribal gatherings, called majalis, at which the special ...


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