ABSTRACT

Focusing on Near Eastern history in Mamluk and Ottoman times, this book, dedicated to Michael Winter, stresses elements of variety and continuity in the history of the Near East, an area of study which has traditionally attracted little attention from Islamists.

Ranging over the period from the thirteenth to the nineteenth century, the articles in this book look at the area from Istanbul down through Syria and Palestine to Arabia, the Yemen and the Sudan. The articles demonstrate the great wealth of the materials available, in a wide variety of languages, from archival documents to manuscripts and art works, as well as inscriptions and buildings, police records and divorce documentation. The topics covered are equally as varied and include Dufism, the festival of Nabi Musa, military organisations, doctors, and charity to name but a few.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

Sufism and sanctity

The Genesis of the wali Allah in Mamluk Jerusalem and Hebron

chapter 2|15 pages

The prince who favored the desert

Fragmentary biography of al-Nasir Ahmad (d. 745/1344)

chapter 5|13 pages

Sign of the Times

Reusing the past in Baybars's architecture in Palestine

chapter 7|10 pages

The hoax of the miraculous speaking wall

Criminal investigation in Mamluk Cairo

chapter 11|11 pages

Evliya Çelebi on `imarets

chapter 12|32 pages

Great fire in the metropolis

The case of the Istanbul conflagration of 1569 and its description by Marcantonio Barbaro

chapter 13|29 pages

Futuh-i Haramayn

Sixteenth-century illustrations of the Hajj route

chapter 14|11 pages

The forgotten province

A prelude to the Ottoman era in Yemen