
- 254 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Medieval Islamic society set great store by the transmission of history: to edify, argue legal points, explain present conditions, offer political and religious legitimacy, and entertain. Modern scholars, too, have had much to say about the usefulness of early Islamic history-writing, although this debate has traditionally focused overwhelmingly on the central Islamic lands.
This book looks instead at local and regional history-writing in Medieval Iberia. Drawing on numerous Arabic texts – historical, geographical and biographical – composed and transmitted in al-Andalus, North Africa and the Islamic east between the ninth and fourteenth centuries, Nicola Clarke offers a nuanced and detailed analysis of narratives about the eighth-century Muslim conquest of Iberia. Comparing how individual episodes, characters, and themes are treated in different texts, and how this treatment relates to intellectual debates, literary trends, and socio-political conditions at the time of writing, she shows how competing priorities shaped myriad variations on a single story and how the scholars and patrons of a corner of the Islamic world distant from Baghdad viewed their own history.
Offering a framework in which historians of Christian Iberia (and of Christian Europe more generally) can approach and make sense of culturally-significant texts from Muslim Iberia, this book will also be relevant to broader debates about the historiography of early Islam. As such, it will be of great interest to scholars of historiography, world history and Islamic studies.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- List of Authors and rulers
- Introduction
- 1 Conceptualizing conquest: The late antique historiographical backdrop
- 2 Successors, jurists, and propagandists: Reconstructing the transmission history of Spanish conquest narratives
- 3 Accommodating outsiders, obeying stereotypes: Mawālī and muwalladūn in narratives of the conquest
- 4 To the ends of the earth: Extremes of east and west in Arabic geographical and ʿajāʿibwritings
- 5 The Table of Solomon: A historiographical motif and its functions
- 6 Excusing and explaining conquest: Traitors and collaborators in Muslim and Christian sources
- 7 On the other side of the world: Comparing narratives of contemporary Islamic conquests in the east
- Conclusion: History on the margins
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index