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The Evolution of Muslim Urban Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Ira M. Lapidus
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley

Extract

Islamic society is ever intriguing. Across broad territories and over millenia of time, it maintains a constant identity; yet it is always elusive, varied, and changing. The study of Islamic urbanism, like so many Islamic topics, oscillates between attempts to define what is fundamental and universal in Islamic city life, and what is ineffably individual about each locality; the contradictory perspectives seem equally valid. While topography, culture, and history have given each locality a unique identity, by the middle ages, Middle Eastern towns between the Nile and the Jaxartes—the core area of Islamic society—shared common features of social organization. Small communities, such as families, neighborhood quarters, and fraternities were the fundamental units of society. Town populations were gathered into loosely organized religious bodies, such as schools of law, Shirite sects, and Sufi brotherhoods, who were dominated by ethnically alien elites organized into slave armies and slave-maintained governments, and who garrisoned and extracted revenues from the towns while remaining separate from local community life. Characteristically, then, Middle Eastern Muslim cities operated on three levels-parochial groups, religious communities, and imperial regimes. Organized urban life depended on the relationships between person and groups within this three-tiered institutional pattern.

Type
Cities
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1973

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References

1 Lapidus, M., Muslim Cities in the Later Middle Ages (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1967),Google Scholar and ‘Muslim Cities and Islamic Societies’, Middle Eastern Cities, edited by the author (Berkeley, 1969), pp. 4774.Google Scholar A brief résumé of previous work, including this paper, appears under the title ‘Traditional Muslim Cities: Structure and Change’, in Brown, L. C., From Medina to Metropolis (Princeton, 1972).Google Scholar

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6 No comprehensive history of military organization has been written, but the following articles may be consulted. O. S. A. Ismail ‘Mutaṣim and the Turks’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 29 (1966), pp. 1224;Google Scholar Bosworth, C. E., ‘Ghaznevid Military Organization’, Der Islam, 26 (1960), pp. 3777;Google Scholar Ayalon, D., L'esclavage du Mamelouk (Jerusalem, 1951).Google Scholar

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Studies of the schools of law in individual cities are few. See in particular Bosworth, C. E., The Ghaznavids (Edinburgh, 1963);Google Scholar Bulliet, R., Nishapur, Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1968;Google Scholar Lapidus, I. M., Muslim Cities.Google Scholar Histories or studies of particular cities are important for understanding the general structure of society. Among the most important are Abū Nuaym al-IṣfahānĪ, Kitāb Akhbār Iṣfahān, 2 vols. (Leiden, 19311934);Google Scholar Narshakhl, , The History of Bukhara, translated by Frye, R. N. (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1954);Google Scholar Sauvaget, J., Alep (Paris, 1941),Google Scholar and ‘Esquisses d'une histoire de la ville de Damas’, Revue des Etudes Islamiques, 8 (1934), pp. 421–80;Google Scholar Cahen, C., Mouvements Populaires et Autonomisme Urbain (Leiden, 1959).Google Scholar

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