Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Note on dates and citations
- Map: The Fertile Crescent in the early Abbasid period
- 1 Conquest history and its uses
- 2 The seventh-century Jazira
- 3 From garrison to city: the birth of Mosul
- 4 Christian élites in the Mosuli hinterland: the Shahārija
- 5 Islam in the north: Jaziran Khārijism
- 6 Massacre and narrative: the Abbasid Revolution in Mosul I
- 7 Massacre and élite politics: the Abbasid Revolution in Mosul II
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
- Other titles in the series
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Note on dates and citations
- Map: The Fertile Crescent in the early Abbasid period
- 1 Conquest history and its uses
- 2 The seventh-century Jazira
- 3 From garrison to city: the birth of Mosul
- 4 Christian élites in the Mosuli hinterland: the Shahārija
- 5 Islam in the north: Jaziran Khārijism
- 6 Massacre and narrative: the Abbasid Revolution in Mosul I
- 7 Massacre and élite politics: the Abbasid Revolution in Mosul II
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
- Other titles in the series
Summary
This study is intended to demonstrate that one can write Islamic provincial history in the post-conquest and Umayyad periods (c. 640–750 CE), a time for which the source material is patchy, late and frustratingly inconsistent. The book's method is to marry history and historiography; its concern is with Muslim and non-Muslim élites who lived in a peripheral area at a time of political and social change. The area – for the most part, present-day northern Syria and Iraq – was peripheral because the caliphs lived in the south, while the Muslim–Byzantine frontier lay to the north. It was a time of political and social change because, in defeating Byzantine and Sasanian armies, the Muslims would begin to transform a region heretofore divided between Byzantine east and Sasanian west into the northern tier of the Umayyad and Abbasid empires.
To write seventh- and eighth-century history we must come to terms with our sources; and as long as early Islamic archaeology,epigraphy, papyrology and numismatics remain as underdeveloped as they presently are, this means coming to terms with authors who wrote well after the events they describe. We are thus forced to rely in large measure on the learned élite's representation of its past,and,this being representation rather than record, we can no longer subordinate the study of early Islamic historiography to historical reconstruction.
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- Information
- Empire and Elites after the Muslim ConquestThe Transformation of Northern Mesopotamia, pp. viii - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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