Number of results to display per page
- Oxford : Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press, 2014.
- Description
- Book — xii, 263 pages : maps, genealogical tables ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- SECTION 1: LAYING THE GROUNDWORK
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Islam and the 'Great Divergence': The case of the Moroccan Marinid Empire 1269-1465 CE.
- 3. Writing History as a Political Act: Ibn Khaldun, Asabiyya, and Legitimacy.
- SECTION 2: GENEALOGY, TITULATURE AND PROPAGANDA
- 4. The Genealogical Legitimisation of the Nasrid Dynasty: The Alleged Ansari Origins of the Banu Nasr.
- 5. Jihad as a Means of Political Legitimation in Thirteenth-Century Sharq al-Andalus.
- 6. Honouring the Prophet's Family: A Comparison of the approaches to Political Legitimacy of Abul-Hasan Ali al-Marini and Ahmad al-Mansur al-Sa'di.
- SECTION 3: CEREMONIES AND RITUAL PERFORMANCES
- 7. 'Azafid Ceuta, Mawlid al-Nabi and the Development of Marinid Strategies of Legitimation.
- 8. On Muhammad V, Ibn al-Khatib and Sufism.
- 9. Hospitality, Charity and Political Legitimacy in Pre-modern Morocco.
- SECTION 4: LEGITIMATION OUTSIDE THE CITY
- 10. Drums, Banners and Baraka: Symbols of authority during the first century of Marinid rule, 1250-1350.
- 11. The Ransom Industry and the Expectation of Refuge on the Western Mediterranean Muslim-Christian Frontier 1085-1350.
- 12. Nomadic Populations and the Challenge to Political Legitimacy: Three Cases from the Medieval Islamic West.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
SAL1&2 (on-campus shelving)
SAL1&2 (on-campus shelving) | Status |
---|---|
Stacks | Request |
062 .B862 V.195 | Unknown |