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1 - Queen of Sheba and Her Mighty Throne

from Part I - Sacred Sources of Authority: The Qurʾan and the Hadith

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2020

Shahla Haeri
Affiliation:
Boston University

Summary

The Quranic revelations concerning the sovereignty of the Queen of Sheba and her encounter with King Solomon are juxtaposed with the latter’s fanciful reconstructions by medieval Muslim biographers. This chapter argues that God’s concern is not with the queen’s marital status, nor with arranging a marriage for the fabulous pair. The queen’s gender is immaterial to her leadership and governance; her faith is at the center of the Quranic revelations. But in its medieval reconstructions, gender politics takes center stage. The queen’s brilliant diplomacy and successful peace-making initiatives to avert certain war were not utmost in the minds of the patriarchal exegetes, but rather the control of this “haughty” – read autonomous – woman’s body, and the restriction of her mobility and sexuality through marriage. I focus on what the story tells us about women and political authority, about the queen’s leadership and charisma, her wisdom and genuine concern for her people’s lives, in her sustained diplomatic efforts to negotiate peace with a much stronger and uncompromising adversary. Her leadership is an example of desirable leadership, regardless of gender, that values negotiation over domination, peace over war and destruction.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 1.1 King Solomon’s Genealogy

Figure 1

Figure 1.2 Queen of Sheba’s Genealogy

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