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Knowledge and social practice in medieval Damascus, 1190-1350Knowledge and social practice in medieval Damascus, 1190-1350

Knowledge and social practice in medieval Damascus, 1190-1350

Michael Chamberlain

About this book

Michael Chamberlain focuses on medieval Damascus to develop a new approach to the relationship between the society and culture of the Middle East. The author argues that historians have long imposed European strictures onto societies to which they were alien. Western concepts of legitimate order were inappropriate to medieval Muslim society where social advancement was dependent upon the production of knowledge and religious patronage, and it was the household, rather than the state agency or the corporation, that held political and social power. An interesting parallel is drawn between the learned elite and the warriors of Damascus who, through similar strategies, acquired status and power and passed them on in their households. By examining material from the Latin West, Sung China, and the Sinicized empires of Inner Asia, the author addresses the nature of political power in the period and places the Middle East within the context of medieval Eurasia.

Details

OL Work ID
OL3957931W

Subjects

Elite (Social sciences)HistoryIntellectual lifeLearning and scholarshipPolitics and governmentSocial historyHistoireMedievalÉlite (sciences sociales)Machtsverhoudingen15.75 history of AsiaPolitique et gouvernementApprentissage et savoirVie intellectuelleSociale situatieDamascus (syria)Syria, politics and governmentSocial history, medieval, 500-1500

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