Shaping a Muslim state : the world of a mid-eighth-century Egyptian official için kapak resmi
Başlık:
Shaping a Muslim state : the world of a mid-eighth-century Egyptian official
Yazar:
Sijpesteijn, Petra.
ISBN:
9780199673902
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
xxvii, 524 pages, 40 unnumbered plates : illustrations, maps ; 22 cm.
Seri:
Oxford studies in Byzantium
İçerik:
Machine generated contents note: pt. I DISCUSSION -- 1. The Egyptian Context: Geography and History -- 1.1. One land -- 1.2. The Nile -- 1.3. Irrigation and water distribution -- 1.4. Flora and fauna -- 1.5. The Fayyum -- 1.6. The pre-Islamic political and administrative structure -- 1.6.1. Political and administrative developments -- 1.6.2. The economy -- 1.6.3. Arabia and Egypt -- 2. Arab Egypt: The First Fifty Years -- 2.1. The Arab conquest of Egypt -- 2.2. Continuous vigilance -- 2.3. Controlling Egypt's might -- 2.4. Post-conquest Muslim rule and government -- 2.5. Arab settlement in the Egyptian countryside -- 2.6. The administrative structure -- 2.7. The fifty-year about-turn -- 2.8. Conclusion -- 3. The Second Fifty Years: Consolidation and Reform. 22. About the collection of jizya -- 23. Organizing the tax collection -- 24. Concerning a loan -- 25. Request for a deposit -- 26. Concerning the repayment of a debt -- 27. An order for veils -- 28. Purchase of radish oil -- 29. Purchase of different commodities -- 30. Letter related to tax collection -- 31. Petition for a fugitive -- 32. Sheep trade with Alexandria -- 33. Beginning of a letter to 'Abd Allah b. As'ad -- 34. Letter from 'Abd Allah b. As'ad -- 35. Restoring tax-collecting rights -- 36. Reporting on the completion of a tax collection -- 37. Letter from Najid b. Muslim to Sahl b. Habib -- 38. Letter to one of Najid's scribes -- 39. Letter from one of Najid's scribes.
Özet:
Shaping a Muslim State provides a synthetic study of the political, social, and economic processes which formed early Islamic Egypt. Looking at a corpus of previously unknown Arabic papyrus letters, dating from between AD 730 and 750, which were written to a Muslim administrator and merchant in the Fayyum oasis in Egypt, Sijpesteijn examines the reasons for the success of the early Arab conquests and the transition from the pre-Islamic Byzantine system and its Egyptian executors to an Arab/Muslim state.
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Kitap EKOBKN0010610 962.02 SIJ 2013
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