1st Edition

Studies on the Civilization of Islam

By H.A.R. Gibb Copyright 1962
    386 Pages
    by Routledge

    386 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1962, this book presents important studies on the history, literature and religion of the Islamic peoples as well as an appraisal of contemporary intellectual currents in the Middle East.

    Part I interprets the basic political and cultural development in medieval Islam, set in the context of its growth from a religious movement in the Arabian peninsula to an imperial structure extending from the Atlantic Ocean to the borders of China.

    Part II includes studies of Islamic institutions, philosophy and religion. The close relationship of Islam to Western traditions through the Biblical and Greek heritages is emphasized and the factors which have moulded unique and distinctive institutions are considered.

    Editors' Note, Preface, Part One. Medieval Islamic History, 1. An Interpretation of Islamic History, 2. The Evolution of Government in Early Islam, 3. Arab-Byzantine Relations under the Umayyad Caliphate, 4. The Social Significance of the Shuubiya, 5. The Armies of Saladin, 6. The Achievement of Saladin, 7. Tarikh, 8. Some Considerations on the Sunni Theory of the Caliphate, 9. Al-Mawardi's Theory of the Caliphate, 10. The Islamic Background of Ibn Khaldun's Political Theory, 11. The Structure of Religious Thought in Islam, 12. Khawatir fil-Adab al-Arabi (Reflections on Arabic Literature), Part Three. Contemporary Intellectual Currents, 13. Studies in Contemporary Arabic Literature, 14. The Reaction in the Middle East Against Western Culture, 15. Problems of Modern Middle Eastern History, Bibliography, Index

    Biography

    H.A.R. Gibb