Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T02:09:23.588Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ribāṭs in Mecca during the medieval period: a descriptive study based on literary sources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2009

Richard T. Mortel
Affiliation:
King Saud University, Riyadh

Extract

The Islamic institution of the ribāṭ appears to have made its initial appearance along the North African coast, in what is today Tunisia, during the second/eighth century. In the first phase of its development, the ribāṭ was essentially a fortress located at a sensitive point along the Islamic frontier, garrisoned by pious individuals who envisaged their vocation as participation in the jihād, the defence of the lands of Islam against external foes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 For a discussion of the ribāt, cf. G. Marcais, ‘Ribāṭ’, in the Encyclopedia of Islam, 1st. ed. (hereafter EI1), cf. also art. ‘Ribāṭ’ in Ei2; Άbd Allāh al-Fa'r, Taṭawwur al-kitābāt wa'l-nuqūsh fī 'l-Ḥijāz mundhu fajr al-Islām ḥattā muntaṣaf al-qarn al-sābi al-Hijrī (Jedda, 1405 A.H./1984); 285–6.

2 Marcais, in EI 1, preferred to date this transformation substantially later, to the sixth/twelfth century, but the following discussion will show that the earliest Meccan ribāṭ—datable to the year 395/1004–5—was already an institution radically different from its North Africanantecedents and essentially in the form in which it was to persist at least until the end of the Mamluk era in 923/1517.

3 cf. Amīn, Muhammad Muhammad, al-Awqāf wa/l-hayāh al-ijtimā'iyya fī Miṣr, 648–923/1250–1517, dirāsa ta'rīkhiyya wathā'iqiyya (Cairo, 1980), 204–21.Google Scholar

4 Aḥmad b., Taqī al-DīnΆAlī al-Maqrīzī, al-Mawā'iẓ wa'l-i'tibār bi-dhikr al-khiṭaṭ wa'l-āthār (Cairo, 1270 A.H.), II, 427.Google Scholar

5 The ribāṭ of al-Muwaffaq, or, as it was also known, the ribāṭ al-Maghāriba (cf. infra), existed until at least 1980; cf. al-Fa'r, Taṭawwur, 319.

6 cf. ibid., passim, with relevant photographs and sketches.

7 cf. Άbd Allāh Άqīl Άqawī, ‘al-Mu'arrikh Taqī al-Dīn al-Fāsī wa kitābuhu“Shifa' al-gharām bi-akhbāral-Balad al-Ḥarām”, ’ in Dirāsāt ta'rīkh al-Jazīra at-Άrabiyya, I, part 2, Maṣādir ta'rīkh al-Jazīra al-Άrabiyya, ed. Abdelgadir M. Abdalla, Sami al-Sakkar and Richard T. Mortel (Riyadh, 1979), 61–7.

8 cf. Nāṣir b. Sa'd al-Rashīd, ‘Banū Fahd, mu'arrikhū Makka al-Mukarrama wa'l-ta'rīf bi-makhṭūṭ al-Najm b. Fahd “Itḥāf al-warā fī akhbār Umm al-Qurā”, ’ in Dirāsāt ta'r‛kh al-Jazīra al-Άrabiyya, i, part 2, 69–90.

9 al-Dhahabī, Shams al-Dīn Abū Άbd Allāh Muḥammad b. 'Uthmān, al-'Ibar fī khabar man ghabar (Kuwait, 1960–66), III, 5960.Google Scholar

10 al-Ṣafadī, Salāh al-Dīh Khalīl b.Aybak, al-Wāi bi'l-wafāyāt (Istanbul, 1949), II, 190–1, who gives the date of his death as 396/1005–6;Google Scholaral-Άsqalānī, Shihāb al-Dīn Aḥmad b. Άlī b. Ḥajar, Lisān al-mīzān (Beirut, 1987),v, 81–3;Google Scholaral-Ḥanbalī, Abū al-Falāḥ Άbd al-Muḥsin b. al-'Imād, Shadharāt al-dhahab fī akhbār man dhahab (Beirut, n.d.), III, 146.Google Scholar

11 al-Fāsī, Taqī al-Dīn Muhammad b. Aḥmad, Shifā' al-gharām bi-akhbār al-Balad al-Ḥarām (Beirut, 1985), I, 528Google Scholar; idem, al-'Iqd al-thamīn fī ta'rlkh al-Balad al-Amīn (Cairo, 1959–69), I, 119. The Dār al-Nadwa extension was constructed by the caliph al-Mu'taḍid in 284/897Google Scholar; cf. El-Hawary, Hassan Mohammed and Wiet, Gaston, Materiaux pour un Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum. Part 4, Arabie, inscriptions et monuments de la Mècque: Ḥaram et Ka'ba, I, fasc. 1 (Cairo, 1985), 61, 76–8. Dār al-Nadwa had been a council hall for prominent Meccans in pre-Islamic times; the site it occupied became part of the Haram during al-Mu'tadid's expansion; cf. Husayn Άbd Ajjāh Bā Salāma, Ta'rīxkh 'imārat al-Masjid al-Ḥarām (3rd. ed., Jedda, 1980), 54–63.Google Scholar

12 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 528; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 20, 61.Google Scholar

13 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 528.Google Scholar

14 ibid.

15 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, III, 275–6.Google Scholar

16 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 527Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 118. For Ja'far al-Barmakī, see D. Sourdel, ‘Barāmika’, in EI 2; idem, Le vizarat Άbbāside de 749 à 936 (Damascus, 1959–60), I, 135–81 passim; Kennedy, Hugh, The Prophet and the age of the caliphate: the Islamic Near East from the sixth to the eleventh century (London, 1986), 141–4.Google Scholar

17 al-Azraqī, Abū al-Walīd Muḥammad b. Ɔbd Allāh, Akhbār Makka wa mā jā'a fihā min al-āthār (3rd. ed., Mecca, 1978), II, 75, 87 (n. 6)Google Scholar; Quṭb al-Dīn al-Makkī al-Ḥanafī al-Nahrawālī, al-I'lam fī a'lām Bayt Allāh al-Ḥarām, in the margins of Aḥmad b. Zaynī Daḥlān, Khulāsat al-kalām fī bayān umarā' al-Bayt al-Ḥarām (Cairo, 1304 a.h.), 77; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 54.

18 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 527.Google Scholar

19 Birdī, Abū al-Mahāsin Jamāl al-Dīn Yūsuf b. Taghrī, al-Nujūm al-zāhira fī mulūk Miṣr wa'l-Qāhira (Cairo, ?–1972), X, 96.Google Scholar

20 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 529; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119.Google Scholar

21 For the meaning of this term, see Manẓūr, Jamāl al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Mukarram b., Līsān al-Άrab (Beirut, n.d.), III, 180Google Scholar; Dozy, Reinhart, Supplèment aux dictionnaires arabes (Leiden, 1881), II, 423.Google Scholar

22 al-Fāsī, , Shifā',I, 529.Google Scholar

23 For Ajyād, see al-Bilādī, Άtiq b. Ghayth, Ma'ālim Makka al-ta'rīkhiyya wa'l-athariyya (Mecca, 1980), 1415Google Scholar; idem, Mu'jam ma'ālim al-Ḥijāz (Mecca, 1978–82), I, 53–6; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 56.Google Scholar

24 al-Ḥamawī, Yāqūt b. Άbd Allah, Mu'jam al-buldān (Beirut, n.d.), III, 138Google Scholar; LeStrange, G., The lands of the eastern caliphate (Cambridge, 1930), 308.Google Scholar

25 , al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122, where the name of the founder of the ribāṭ is given as 'al-Dawazī'.

26 This date has been derived from internal evidence in both works; cf. Shifā', II, 335; 'Iqd, IV, 153, for the latest date mentioned in either work.

27 Arabic Sabta; cf. Yāqūt, , Mu'jam, III, 182–3.Google Scholar

28 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

29 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 535Google Scholaridem, 'Iqd, I, 122. for the Ḥizāmiyya district of Mecca, cf. al-Azraqī, Akhbār Makka, II, 81, 91–2.

30 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 530Google Scholaridem, 'Iqd, I, 119; IV, 385.

31 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I 383Google Scholar; Rifat, Ibrāhīm, Mir'āt al-Ḥaramayn (Cairo, 1344 A.H./1925), I, 233Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 58.

32 al-Fa'r, Tatawwur, 287.

33 cf. Richard T. Mortel, ‘The Kiswa: its origins and development from pre-Islamic times until the end of the Mamluk period’, Ages, 3/2, 1988, 38.

34 al-Fāsī, 'Iqd, IV, 385–6. For further information on the career of the Iranian merchant Rāmisht, cf. S. M. Stern, ‘Rāmisht of Sīrāf, a merchant millionaire of the twelfth century’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1967, 10–14, which also includes a discussion of this ribāt. I have elected to follow Stern's vocalization of the name of this merchant, as opposed to the version ‘Rāmusht’ found in al-Fāsī, 'Iqd, IV, 385.

35 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 530Google Scholar; al-Fa'r, Tatawwur, 287.

36 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, IV, 385–6.Google Scholar

37 The mithqāl refers to a theoretical gold standard coin weighing 4.25 grams, or to a real dinar whose weight was intended to be 4.25 grams; cf. Jere L. Bacharach, ‘The dinar versus the ducat’, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 4, 1973, 80, 83–5.

38 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, IV, 155.Google Scholar

39 , IV, 308–9; al-Sakhāwī, Shams al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Άbd al-Raḥmān, al-Ḍaw' al-lāmi' li-ahl al-qarn al-tāsi' (Beirut, n.d.), III, 6.Google Scholar

40 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, VIII, 1617.Google Scholar

41 al-Fa'r, Tatawwur, 350–1.

42 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, I, 122.Google Scholar

43 ibid.; idem, Shifā', I, 527.

44 Arsūf: a Palestinian coastal town; cf. Gibb, H. A. R., ‘Arsūf’, in EI2; LeStrange, G., Palestine under the Moslems (Boston and New York, 1890), 399.Google Scholar

45 al-Mundhirī, Zakī al-Dīn Abu Muḥammad Άbd al-Άẓīm, al-Takmila li-wafāyāt al-naqala (Beirut, n.d.), I, 277.Google Scholar

46 al-Fa'r, , Shifā' I, 526–7.Google Scholar

47 ibid., I, 527; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

48 cf. his biography in al-Mundhiri, Takmila, I, 351; Khallikān, Abū 'l-Άbbās Shams al-Dīn Ahmad b. Muhammad b., Wafāyāt al-a'yān wa anbā' abnā' al-zamān (Beirut, 1968–72), III, 162Google Scholar; al-Kātib, al-Ἱmād al-Aṣfahānī, Kharīdat al-qasr wa jarīdat al-'asr, qism shu'arā' Misr (Cairo, n.d.), I, 3554Google Scholar; al-Nuwayrī, Shihāb al-Dīn Ahmad b. Άbd al-Wahhāb, Nihāyat al-arab fī funūn al-adab (Cairo, 1923– ), VIII, 151Google Scholar; al-Subkī, Άbd al-Wahhāb b. Άlī, Țabaqāt al-Shāfi'iyya al-kubrā (Beirut, n.d.), IV, 253–4Google Scholar; al-Maqrīzī, Taqī al-Dīn Ahmad b. Άlī, al-Sulūk li-ma'rifat duwal al-mulūl, (Cairo, 1956–73), I, 153–4Google Scholar; , Ibn Taghrī Birdī, Nujūm, VI, 156–8Google Scholar; al-īImād, Ibn, Shadharāt, IV, 324–7.Google Scholar

49 al-Fāsi, , Shifā, I, 536.Google Scholar

50 ibid., I, 527; idem, 'Iqd, I, 118. Bāb al-Janā'iz (the Door of Funerals); funeral processions customarily exited the Haram by this door, and proceeded northwards to the cemetery of al-Ma'la; cf. al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 381; Rifat, Mir'āt, I, 230; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 54.

51 al-Fa'r, Tatawwur, 296–302.Google Scholar

52 , al-Mundhirī, Takmila, I, 215. Al-Marāghī was buried inside another ribālṭ he built next to the Prophet's Mosque at Medina; this is a rare instance of a ribāŭ incorporating a tomb, a phenomenon unheard of in Mecca.Google Scholar

53 al-Fa'r, Tatawwur, 296302.Google Scholar

54 , al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 527–8Google Scholar; , al-Fa'r, Taṭawwur, 298.Google Scholar

55 , al-Fāsī, Shifā, I, 527.Google Scholar

56 I, 529; 'Iqd, I, 119; VIII, 293; Fahd, Najm al-Dīn 'Umar b., Itḥāf al-warā bi-akhbār Umm al-Qurā (Jedda, n.d.), II, 544.Google Scholar

57 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 533Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 120; VII, 83–4. For the reign of Kilij Arslān, cf. Holt, 171–2.

58 Khallikān, Ibn, Wafāyāt, IV, 82–4Google Scholar; Birdī, Ibn Taghrī, Nujūm, VI, 144Google Scholar; al-'Imād, Ibn, Shadharāt, VI, 317–18.Google Scholar

59 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, VII, 83–4.Google Scholar

60 Birdī, Ibn Taghrī, Nujūm, VI, 182.Google Scholar

61 , al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 528Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 118.

62 al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 528. 'Uṭayfa b. Abī Numayy ruled Mecca at times independently and at others jointly with his brother Rumaytha, from 719/1319 until 737/1336–37; cf. Mortel, Richard, al-Ahwāl al-siyāsiyya wa'l-iqtisādiyya bi-Makka fī l-'asr al-Mamlīkī (Riyadh, 1985), 7989.Google Scholar

63 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 529.Google Scholar For Bāb al-'Umra, cf. ibid., I, 383; Rifat, Mir'at, I, 233; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 13, 14, 60.

64 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 529Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119; VI, 35.

65 al-Fāsī, , Ta'rīkh 'Iqd, VI, 36.Google Scholar

66 ibid., VI, 34.

67 Abū, MuhammadĀAbd Allāh, al-Tayyib, , Makhrama, Ta'rīkh thaghr ĀAdan(Leiden, 1936), II, 132.Google Scholar

68 cf. al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, VI, 34Google Scholar, where al-Zanjīlī is referred to as t he ‘ amir of the two Ḥarams’ in a waqf document seen by al-Fāsī himself.

69 ibid., VI, 334–5.

70 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 528–9Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119.

71 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 528Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119.

72 E1-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 20, 61.

73 al-Fāsī, , Shifā' I, 528.Google Scholar

74 The precise meaning of the termqa qā'id (i.e., leader, commander) in medieval Meccan remains unclear. Shihāb, al-Dīn Abū al-Ābbās Aḥmad b. Ālīal-Qalqashandī, Ṣubḥ al-a'shā fī Ṣinā'at al-inshā (Cairo, 1910–20), IV, 276Google Scholar, claims that the word referred to an important follower of a liasanid sharif of Mecca. On the other hand, a cursory review of some biographical notices of individuals identified as qa'ids in the historiographical literature forces us to modify al-Qalqashandī's definition and conclude that the qāīid was, in fact, a slave or freedman of one of the sharifs; cf. al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, II, 73; IV, 71;Google ScholarFahd, Najm al-Dīh ‘Umar b., al-Durr al-kamīn bi-dhayl al-Īqdal-thamīn fi ta'rīkh al-Balad al-Amīn, MS King Saud University Libraries, no. fī' 19, ff169b, 172aGoogle Scholar; Shams, al-Dīn Muhammad b. Ābd al-Raḥmān al-Sakhāwī, al-Tibr al-masbūk fi dhayl al-Sulūk 012B;, Shifā', I, 534–5;Google Scholar idem, 'Iqd I 121–2. For al-Malikal-Afḍal, cf. al-Mundhirī, Takmila, III, 140; Shihāb, al-Dīn Abū Muḥammad 'Abd al-Raḥmān b. Ismā'īl, Abū Shāma al-Maqdisī, al-Dhayl 'alā al-Rawḍatayn (Beirut, 1974), 145Google Scholar; Wāṣil, Jamāl al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Sālim b., Mufarrij al-kurūb fī akhbār Banī Ayyūb (Cairo, 1953–72), II, 423Google Scholar; al-Ṣafadī, Ṣalāh al-Dīn, Umarā' Dimashq fī 'l-Islām (Damascus, 1955), 58Google Scholar; al-Zabī;dī, al-Murtaḍā, Tarwīḥ al-qulūb fī dhikr mulūk Banī Ayyūb (Damascus, 1969), 89Google Scholar; Birdī, Ibn Taghrī, Nujūm, VI, 262.Google Scholar

75 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534–5.Google Scholar

8O al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, IV, 104.Google Scholar

81 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 537.Google Scholar

82 cf. Birdī, Ibn Taghrī, Nujūm, VI, 191Google Scholar; Ibn, al-'Imād, Shadharāt, V, 78Google Scholar; C. E. Bosworth, ‘Ghūrids’, in EI2; Rizvi, S. A. A., The wonder that was India, II (London, 1987), 1624Google Scholar; The Cambridge history of India, III, Turks and Afghans, (ed.) Wolseley, Haig (2nd. Indian ed., Delhi, 1965), 3845Google Scholar.

83 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 537Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 123; II, 223.

84 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, VI, 204–5Google Scholar

85 ibid., I, 122.

86 Abū 'bd Allāh Muḥammad b. 'Abd Allāh b. BaṠṠūa, Tuḥfat al-nuẓẓār fī gharā'ib al-amṣār wa 'ajā'ib al-asfār (Beirut, 1964), 140.

87 For Bāb Ibrāhīm, cf. Rif'at, Mir'āt, I, 233; Ei-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 59.

88 al-Fa'r, TaṠawwur, 318–19.

89 al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 536; idem, 'Iqd, VI, 204–5; al-Fa'r, TaṠawwur, 319–20.

90 Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, Tuḥfa, 140.

91 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, IV, 104.Google Scholar

92 ibid., VI, 107; cf. his biography in ibid., VI, 106–7; al-Sakhāwī, Ḍaw', V, 148.

93 El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 15.

94 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121.

95 al-Fāsī, Shifā', I, 529–30. For the annex, cf. El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 59; Bā Salāma, Ta'rīkh, 63–8.

96 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, I, 119.Google Scholar

97 al-Abbār, Abū Άbd Allāh Muḥammad b. Άbd Allāh b., al-Takmila li-kitāb al-Ṣila (Cairo, 1955), I, 117–18Google Scholar; al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, III, 58.Google Scholar

98 al-Fāsī, , Shifā, I, 532Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I,Ta'rīkh 120; III, 6, 8.Google Scholar

99 al-Mundhirī, , Takmila, III, 408–9.Google Scholar

100 cf. Rifat, Mir'āt, I, 231; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matèriaux, 56.

101 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 532Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 120

102 al-Fāsī, , Shifa', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122

103 al-Fāsī, , Shifa', I, 381Google Scholar; Rifat, , Mir'āt, I, 230Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 53

104 al-Fāsī, , Shifa', I, 528Google Scholar; 'Abd, al-Qādir b. Muḥammad al-Anṣārīal-Jazīrī, al-Durar al-farā'id al-munazẓama fi akhbār al-hājj wa ṭariq Makka al-Mukarrama (Riyadh, 1983), I, 595Google Scholar

105 al-Fāsī, 'Iqd, III, 324–5; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 60.Google Scholar Wādī Marr al-ẓahrān intersected the old road to Madina 24kms, or more than one day's travel in the pre-modern era, north of Mecca. Cf. al-Malik al-Mu'ayyad, Isma'īl, Abu, 'l-Fidā, Taqwīm al-buldān (Paris, 1840), 95Google Scholar; al-Bilādī, , Mu'jam ma'ālim al-Hijāz, VIII, 102Google Scholar; Mortel, Richard T., ‘Maṣādir al-tamwīn al-ghidhā'ī li-imārat Makka (358/969–923/1517)’, Majallat Kulliyyat al-Ādāb, Jami'at al-Malik Su'ūd, 12/1, 1985, 196.Google Scholar Nakhia al-Shāmiyya, another major wadi of the Hijaz, opened into Wādī Marr 43kms north of Mecca; cf. Abu '1-Fida, Taqwīm, 95; al-Qalqashandī, , 1E62;ubḥ, IV, 259Google Scholar; al-Bilādī, , Mu'jam ma'alim al-Ḥijaz, IX, 42Google Scholar; Mortel, ‘Masadir’, 196–7.

106 Ibn Baṭṭīta, Tuḥfa, 148; Rumaytha b. Abl Numayy ruled Mecca intermittently from 701/1301 until his death in 746/1345; at times he reigned as sole amir, and at other times in concert with one of his brothers, Ḥumayḍa or 'Uṭayfa; cf. Mortel, Aḥwāl, 66–92.

107 Ibn, Fahd, Ithāf, IV, 318.Google Scholar

108 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121; VI, 260.

109 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 532Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 120; VIII, 90.

110 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

111 al-Fāsī, , Shifaā', I, 529Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119. For Bāb al-Sudda, cf. al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 383–4Google Scholar; Rifat, , Mir'āt, I, 234Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 60.

112 al-Fā, Shifā', I, 532Google Scholar;

113 ibid., I, 121; idem, Shifā', I, 534.

114 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 532.Google Scholar

115 Ibn Baṭṭuta, Tuḥfa, 141.

116 al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, V, 109.Google Scholar

117 cf. his biographical notice in al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', VIII, 260–2.Google Scholar The term khawājā, as used in Mecca, was a title of respect, bestowed on a prominent merchant by his peers, in recognition of his wealth and influence; cf. Richard, T.Mortel, ‘The mercantile community of Mecca during the late Mamlūk period’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 3rd. series, 4/1, 1994, 17ff.Google Scholar

118 Ibn, Fahd, Ithaf, IV, 527.Google Scholar For Bāb, Ta'rīkh'AlīGoogle Scholar, cf. al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 382Google Scholar;Rifat, , Mir'āt, I, 231Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 55.

119 al-Fāsī, , Iqd, III, 239240.Google Scholar

120 cf. El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 16.

121 al-Fāsī, , Shifī', I, 533Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121; III, 240; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥတf, III, 238–9Google Scholar

122 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf III, 239, note 1.Google Scholar

123 cf. his biography in al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, V, 75–6Google Scholar; VIII, 161; al-Maqrīzī, , Sulūk, III, 165.Google ScholarShihāb al-Dīn Ahmad b. 'All b. Hajar, al-'Asqalanl, al-Durar al-kāmina fī a'yān al-mi'a al-thāmina (Cairo, 1966), II, 332.Google Scholar

124 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 537.Google Scholar

125 cf. El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 6, 12, 13, 14; al-Bilādi, , Mu'jam ma'ālim al-Ḥijaz, V, 18.Google Scholar

126 Ibn, Ḥajar, Durar, III, 284–5.Google Scholar

127 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 532Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 409–10.

128 Ibn, Fahd, Ithāf, III, 311.Google Scholar

129 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 382Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 40.

130 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 311–12.Google Scholar

131 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121; VIII, 343; al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', XII, 147.Google Scholar

132 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, VIII, 331–2; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf III, 340.Google Scholar

133 cf. al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 383Google Scholar; El-Hawary and Wiet, Matériaux, 58; Bāb al-Ḥazwara took its name from a pre-Islamic market on the site.

134 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 530–1Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, II, 254–5; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf III, 349.Google Scholar

135 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 533Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121.

136 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 533Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, VI, 147; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', V, 205–6.Google Scholar

137 Ḥasan b.'Ajlan's lengthy reign, 798/1395–818/1415; 819/1416–829/1426, was of pivotal significance in the history of the amirate of Mecca, in that it witnessed the de facto imposition of Mamluk hegemony over Mecca and Jedda; cf. Mortel, Ahwal, 119–40; Ahmad, al-Sibā'ī, Ta'rikh Makka (4th. ed., Mecca, 1979), 290300.Google Scholar For an in-deptri contemporary biography of Ḥasan b. 'Ajlān, cf. al-Fāsī, , 'Iqd, IV, 86155.Google Scholar

138 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 383, 530Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119; IV, 96; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf III, 423Google Scholar; al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', III, 104.Google Scholar

139 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', IV 104.Google Scholar For Wādī 'Aqiq, cf. al-Sakhāwī, , Mu'jam ma'alim al-Ḥijāz, VI, 134Google Scholar; G. Rentz, ‘Άqiq‘, in EI 2.

140 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 537Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 123; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 438.Google Scholar

141 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 531Google Scholar; al-Sakhāwī, , Sulūk, IV, 345, 378Google Scholar; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 500Google Scholar; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', IV, 250Google Scholar; V, 103.

142 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 531Google Scholar; al-Sakhāwī, , Sulūk, IV 475Google Scholar; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 500Google Scholar; Ibn Taghrī, Birdī, Nujūm, XV, 152–4Google Scholar; al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', IV, 249–50; V, 103.Google Scholar

143 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, IV, 115; Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, III, 508.Google Scholar

144 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 533Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, VI, 106–8; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', V, 148.Google Scholar

145 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 529Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 119.

146 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 532Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 120.

147 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121.

148 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 534Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 121.

149 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 535Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

150 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 536Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

151 al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 536Google Scholar; idem, 'Iqd, I, 122.

152 Ibn, Fahd, Durr, ff. 103a–bGoogle Scholar; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', III, 127.Google Scholar

153 Ibn, Fahd, Durr, f. 103bGoogle Scholar; idem, Itḥāf, IV, 151–3.

154 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf, IV, 151–3.Google Scholar

155 ibid., IV, 277; idem, Durr, f. 111b; al-Sakhawi, Daw', in, 306.

156 cf.Ḥasan, al-Basha, al-Alqāb al-Islāmiyyafī'l-ta'rīkh wa'l-wathā'iq wa'l-āthār (Cairo, 1957), 280–1;Google ScholarDozy, , Supplément, II, 414.Google Scholar

157 al-Sakhawi, , Ḍaw', XII, 44–5Google Scholar; Iyās, Abū 'l-Barakāt Muḥammad b. Aḥmad b., Badā'i' al-zuhūr fī waqā'i' al-duhūr (Cairo, 1982–84), III, 156–7;Google ScholarWiistenfeld, F., Chroniken der Stadt Mekka (Leipzig, 1857–61), II, 111.Google Scholar

158 cf. Gaston, Wiet, ‘Les secretaires de la chancellerie (kuttāb al-sirr) en Égypte sous les Mamlouks Circassiens (784–922/1382–1517’, in Melanges Rene Basset (Paris, 1923–25), I, 271314;Google ScholarHolt, P. M., The age of the Crusades: the Near East from the eleventh century to 1517 (London, 1986), 145;Google Scholaral-Baqlī, Muhammad Qandīl, al-Ta'rīfbi muṣtalaḥāt Ṣubḥ al-a'shā (Cairo, 1983), 282;Google ScholarPetry, Carl F., Ṫhe civilian elite of Cairo in the later middle ages (Princeton, 1981), 205–9.Google Scholar

159 %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', XI, 88–9;Google ScholarIbn, Iyās, Bada'i', III, 255.Google Scholar

160 %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', XI, 89.Google Scholar

161 ibid., VIII, 260–2.

162 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 527–8Google Scholar; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', VIII, 261.Google Scholar

163 Relevant aspects of this relationship have been summarized in Mortel, Richard T., ‘Prices in Mecca during the Mamluk period’, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 32, 1989, 279–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

164 al-Nahrawālī, , I'lam, 151–2.Google Scholar

165 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 619–20, 638.Google Scholar

166 cf. al-Fāsī, , Shifā', I, 527;Google Scholar idem, 'Iqd, I, 118.

167 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 620.Google Scholar

168 cf. Amīn, , al-Awqāf 341ff.,Google Scholar for a detailed explanation of istibdāl.

169 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 620, 624;Google Scholaral-Nahrawālī, , I'lam, 152.Google Scholar

170 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 639;Google Scholaral-Nahrawālī, , I'lam, 151–2.Google Scholar

171 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 644Google Scholar.

172 cf. his biography in %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', I, 8899.Google Scholar

173 Ibn, Fahd, Itḥāf IV, 648Google Scholar; %al-Sakhāwī, , Ḍaw', VI, 290.Google Scholar