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New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys

Cette série estimée propose une exploration complète et perspicace des études islamiques. Chaque volume est rédigé par un expert de premier plan, offrant à la fois un aperçu général de son sujet et présentant une pensée académique originale. Elle constitue une ressource inestimable pour les étudiants et les universitaires cherchant une compréhension approfondie des diverses facettes de la culture et de l'histoire islamiques.

New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys: The Muslims of Medieval Italy
Twelver Shiism
Introduction to the Qur'an
Medieval Islamic Medicine
An Introduction to Islamic Archaeology
  • This introduction to the archaeology of the Islamic world traces the history of the discipline from its earliest manifestations through to the present, evaluating the contribution made by archaeology to the understanding of key aspects of Islamic culture.

    An Introduction to Islamic Archaeology
    3,4
  • An up-to-date survey of medieval Islamic medicine offering new insights to the role of medicine and physicians in medieval Islamic culture.

    Medieval Islamic Medicine
    5,0
  • Surveying the life, aims, character and inspiration of Muhammad, this classic introduction explains the history, form and chronology of the Qur'an, and gives the views of Muslim and Occidental scholars.

    Introduction to the Qur'an
    3,6
  • Twelver Shiism

    • 272pages
    • 10 heures de lecture

    This book charts the history of Twelver Shi'ism and the processes underlying the development of its key distinctive doctrines and practices which ensured its survival in the face of repeated internal and external challenges.

    Twelver Shiism
  • This significant new work focuses on the formation and fragmentation of an Arab-Muslim state and its society in Sicily and south Italy between 800 and 1300, which led to the formation of an enduring Muslim-Christian frontier during the age of the Crusades. It examines the long- and short-term impact of Muslim authority in regions that were to fall into the hands of European rulers, and explains how and why Muslim and Norman conquests imported radically different dynamics to the central Mediterranean. On the island of Sicily, a majority Muslim population came to be ruled by Christian kings who adopted and adapted political ideologies from Mediterranean regimes, while absorbing cultural influences from the diverse peoples over whom they reigned. This work provides an engaging, expert and wide-ranging introduction to the subject, and offers fresh, clear insights into the evolution of both Europe and the Islamic world.Key Features*An authoritative new book in a field where very little has yet been written*Explores the formation of lasting Muslim-Christian frontiers in medieval Europe. *Covers issues including Muslim-Christian relations, conquest, colonisation, conflict and acculturation, and the transmission and exchange of ideas from east to west*Suitable for a range of readers from the interested public and students to university researchers

    New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys: The Muslims of Medieval Italy
    3,6