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The Court of the Caliphate of Al-Andalus : Four Years in Umayyad C Rdoba, Hardback Book

The Court of the Caliphate of Al-Andalus : Four Years in Umayyad C Rdoba Hardback

Part of the Edinburgh Studies in Classical Islamic History and Culture series

Hardback

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Offers an in-depth study of the Umayyad Caliphate of al-Andalus in its primeProvides a comprehensive study of the caliphate of Cordoba based on the 'annals' by '?s b.

A?mad al-R?z? and other Arab sources relating to the periodBrings together textual evidence with the archaeological record to produce a vivid description of the social formation of al-Andalus in this periodAnalyses the structure and operation of a centralised 'state' in the High Middle AgesExamines the legitimisation of power and authority in an Islamicate social formationOffers a rigorous study of the Caliphate of Cordoba, which is usually the subject of idealised views with little historical baseMakes accessible to English-speaking audiences the huge advance of recent historical studies on the Umayyad caliphateDuring the second half of the 10th/4th century, the Umayyad caliphate of al-Andalus became a powerful political formation in Western Europe.

Described by the contemporary German nun Hrotsvitha as the 'ornament of the world', Cordoba was the destiny of embassies and traders coming from places as far away as Constantinople, the Ottoman empire and Italy.

The zenith of this political supremacy coincided with the rule of al-?akam II (961-976 CE), whose name is associated with the enlargement of the mosque of Cordoba, the magnificent palatine city of Mad?nat al-Zahr?? and the rich caliphal library which housed Arab, Latin and Hebrew manuscripts. This book is based on an extraordinary source that had never been the subject of a comprehensive study: the annals written by an official and chronicler of the caliph's court, '?s b.

A?mad al-R?z?, who carefully annotated the big and small events of the court.

Used by Ibn ?ayy?n to compose one of the volumes of his celebrated Muqtabis, these 'annals' have come to us in a substantial fragment of more than 135 folia that cover the period from June 971 to July 975 CE.

This source provides an eye-witness account of the caliphate, which describes with stunning detail all the events, characters, places and narratives of the Umayyad caliphate, and is a fundamental work in helping us to understand the configuration of the Mediterranean in the 10th century CE.

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