An edition of Sea of the caliphs (2018)

Sea of the caliphs

the Mediterranean in the medieval Islamic world

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Sea of the caliphs
Christophe Picard, Christophe ...
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Last edited by ImportBot
August 5, 2020 | History
An edition of Sea of the caliphs (2018)

Sea of the caliphs

the Mediterranean in the medieval Islamic world

  • 1 Want to read

"How could I allow my soldiers to sail on this disloyal and cruel sea?" These words, attributed to the most powerful caliph of medieval Islam, Umar Ibn al-Khattab (634-644), have led to a misunderstanding in the West about the importance of the Mediterranean to early Islam. This body of water, known in Late Antiquity as the Sea of the Romans, was critical to establishing the kingdom of the caliphs and for introducing the new religion to Europe and Africa. Over time, it also became a pathway to commercial and political dominion, indispensable to the prosperity and influence of the Islamic world. Sea of the Caliphs returns Muslim sailors to their place of prominence in the history of the Islamic caliphate. As early as the seventh century, Muslim sailors competed with Greek and Latin seamen for control of this far-flung route of passage. Christophe Picard recreates these adventures as they were communicated to admiring Muslims by their rulers. After the Arab conquest of southern Europe and North Africa, Muslims began to speak of the Mediterranean in their strategic visions, business practices, and notions of nature and the state. Jurists and ideologues conceived of the sea as a conduit for jihad, even as Muslims' maritime trade with Latin, Byzantine, and Berber societies increased. In the thirteenth century, Christian powers took over Mediterranean trade routes, but by that time a Muslim identity that operated both within and in opposition to Europe had been shaped by encounters across the sea of the caliphs.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
395

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Sea of the Caliphs
Sea of the Caliphs
2018, Harvard University Press
in English
Cover of: Sea of the caliphs

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Introduction: The end of the Noorish and Saracen pirate?
Part I. The Arab Mediterranean between representation and appropriation: The Arab discovery of the Mediterranean
Arab writing on the conquest of the Mediterranean
The silences of the sea: the Abbasid jihad
The geographers' Mediterranean
Muslim centers of the western Mediterranean: Islam without the Abbasids
The Mediterranean of the Western caliphs
The western Mediterranean: last bastion of Islam's maritime ambitions
Part II. Mediterranean strategies of the caliphs: The Mediterranean of the two empires
Controlling the Mediterranean: the Abbasid model
The maritime awakening of the Muslim West
The maritime imperialism of the caliphs in the tenth century: the end of jihad?
Islam's maritime sovereignty in the face of Latin expansion
Conclusion: The medieval Mediterranean and Islamic memory.

Edition Notes

Translation from the French of: La mer des califes.

"This book was originally published in French as La mer des califes: Une histoire de la Mediterranee musulmane, VIIe-XIIe siecle, copyright (c) Editions du Seuil, 2015"--Title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
909/.0982201
Library of Congress
DS37.8 .P52813 2018, DS37.8.P52813 2018

The Physical Object

Pagination
vii, 395 pages
Number of pages
395

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26952966M
ISBN 10
0674660463
ISBN 13
9780674660465
LCCN
2017025099
OCLC/WorldCat
993134195

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August 5, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
May 24, 2019 Created by MARC Bot import new book