Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Notes on Transliteration, Place Names, Dates, Editions, and Translations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Ties that Bound the Societies of the Islamic Empire
- Part I Personal ties
- 1 Ties of Unfreedom in Late Antiquity and Early Islam: Debt, Dependency and the Origins of Islamic Law
- 2 The Local Clergy and “Ties of Indebtedness” in Abbasid Egypt: Some Reflections on Studying Credit and Debt in Early Islamicate Societies
- 3 ‘Return to God and the Brotherhood of Good and Excellent People’: Bringing the Prodigal Son Back Home in Ayyubid Egypt
- 4 Aloneness as Connector in Arabic Papyrus Letters of Request
- 5 Swearing Abū al-Jaysh into Office: The Loyalties of Ṭūlūnid Egypt
- Part II Institutions
- Part III Communities
- Index
5 - Swearing Abū al-Jaysh into Office: The Loyalties of Ṭūlūnid Egypt
from Part I - Personal ties
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Notes on Transliteration, Place Names, Dates, Editions, and Translations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Ties that Bound the Societies of the Islamic Empire
- Part I Personal ties
- 1 Ties of Unfreedom in Late Antiquity and Early Islam: Debt, Dependency and the Origins of Islamic Law
- 2 The Local Clergy and “Ties of Indebtedness” in Abbasid Egypt: Some Reflections on Studying Credit and Debt in Early Islamicate Societies
- 3 ‘Return to God and the Brotherhood of Good and Excellent People’: Bringing the Prodigal Son Back Home in Ayyubid Egypt
- 4 Aloneness as Connector in Arabic Papyrus Letters of Request
- 5 Swearing Abū al-Jaysh into Office: The Loyalties of Ṭūlūnid Egypt
- Part II Institutions
- Part III Communities
- Index
Summary
This paper discusses the succession ceremony organized by Aḥmad ibn Ṭūlūn in 270/884 for his son and heir, Khumārawayh, as described by Egyptian Arabic sources, notably Sīrat Aḥmad ibn Ṭūlūn of al-Balawī, an underutilized text for Abbasid history. The paper considers three overlapping questions. First, how should the accounts be read, as “representational” or, alternatively, as prescriptive, thus of a piece with elements of the Mirror for Princes literature? Second, were Ṭūlūnid networks of loyalty and dependence solely reliant on material inducements or did individuals invest themselves in the Egyptian regime beyond the point of self-interest? The question goes to the problem of material vs. emotional ties of dependency. And, third, was Ibn Ṭūlūn successful in creating a lasting power base? The question goes to the extent to which his contemporaries signed on to his “project” of redefining relations with the Abbasid center.
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- Mechanisms of Social Dependency in the Early Islamic Empire , pp. 150 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024
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