The great caliphs
the golden age of the 'Abbasid Empire
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Author
Publication
2009 - Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut
Language
English
Word Count
61,000 words, Guess
Page Count
244 pages
Physical Format
Electronic resource
Identifiers
- Internet Archivegreatcaliphsgold00benn
- Internet Archivegreatcaliphsgold0000benn
- ISBN-100300154895
- ISBN-10128235292X
- ISBN-100300152272
and 10 more
- ISBN-139780300154894
- ISBN-139781282352926
- ISBN-139780300152272
- Library of Congress Control Number2009922520
- OCLC Control Number593239917
- OCLC Control Number317471812
- Better World Books9780300152272
- Better World Books9781282352926
- Better World Books9780300154894
- Open LibraryOL25568448M
Classifications
- DDC909.097671
- LCCDS38.6 .B46 2009eb
- LCCDS38.6 .B46 2009
Alternate Titles
- Golden age of the 'Abbasid Empire
Description
"The flowering of the 'Abbasid caliphate between 750 and 1258 CE is often considered the classical age of Islamic civilization. In the preceding 120 years, the Arabs - inspired by their powerful new version of Abrahamic monotheism, Islam - had conquered much of the known world of antiquity and established a vast empire stretching from Spain to China. But was this empire really so very different, as has sometimes been claimed, from what it superseded? The Great Caliphs explores the immense achievements of the 'Abbasid age through the lens of Mediterranean history." "When the Umayyad caliphs were replaced by the 'Abbasids in 750, and the Arab capital moved to the purpose-built city of Baghdad, Iraq quickly became the centre not only of an imperium but also of a culture built on the foundations of the great civilizations of antiquity: Greece, Rome, Byzantium and Persia. Debunking popular misconceptions about the Arab conquests, Amira Bennison shows that, far from seeing themselves as purging the 'occidental' culture of the ancient world with a 'pure' and 'oriental' Islamic doctrine, the 'Abbasids perceived themselves to be as much within the tradition of Mediterranean and Near Eastern empire as any of their predecessors. Like other outsiders who inherited the Roman Empire, the Arabs had as much interest in preserving as in destroying, even while they were challenged by the paganism of the past. Indebted to that past while building creatively on its foundations, the 'Abbasids and their rulers inculcated and nurtured precisely the 'civilized' values which western civilization so often purports to represent, sometimes in apparent opposition to Islam. The Great Caliphs shows what a huge debt Europe in fact owes to these remarkable Muslim rulers."--Jacket.
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Other Editions
- The great caliphs: the golden age of the 'Abbasid Empire
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