Violence in Islamic Thought from the Mongols to European Imperialism

Robert Gleave editor István Kristó-Nagy editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:13th Jul '18

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Violence in Islamic Thought from the Mongols to European Imperialism cover

The violent conquest of the eastern part of the lands under Muslim rule by the Mongols marked a new period in the history of Islamic civilisation and in attitudes towards violence. This volume examines the various intellectual and cultural reactions of Muslim thinkers to these events, both within and without the territories subjected to Mongol control. Each chapter examines how violent acts were assessed by Muslim intellectuals, analysing both changes and continuity within Islamic thought over time. Each chapter is structured around a case study in which violent acts are justified or condemned, revealing the variety of attitudes to violence in the medieval period. They are framed by a detailed introduction, focusing on theoretical perspectives on violence and religion and their application, or otherwise, to medieval Islam.

[A] valuable contribution to the history of ideas in the late medieval and early modern period, and the editors and the contributing authors are to be commended for this achievement. -- Evrim Binbaş, University of Bonn * Bulletin of SOAS vol. 82, issue 3 *
A wide-ranging and authoritative discussion of both practical and philosophical attitudes to violence in late Medieval Islam * Hugh Kennedy, SOAS University of London *
The book provides a sense of the highly complex and fluid role that violence played in Islamic thought over the course of several centuries, a target that the book undoubtedly strikes. -- Michael Hope, Yonsei University * Situations *

ISBN: 9781474413008

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 512g

256 pages