
When The Umayyads, The First Islamic Dynasty, Rose To Power Shortly After The Death Of The Prophet Muhammad (d. 632), The Polity Of Which They Assumed Control Had Only Recently Expanded Out Of Arabia Into The Roman Eastern Mediterranean, Iraq And Iran. A Century Later, By The Time Of Their Downfall In 750, The Last Umayyad Caliphs Governed The Largest Empire That The World Had Seen, Stretching From Spain In The West To The Indus Valley And Central Asia In The East. By Then, Their Dynasty And The Ruling Circles Around It Had Articulated With Increasing Clarity The Public Face Of The New Monotheistic Religion Of Islam, Created Major Masterpieces Of World Art And Architecture, Some Of Which Still Stand Today, And Built A State Apparatus That Was Crucial To Ensuring The Continuity Of The Islamic Polity. Within The Vast Lands Under Their Control, The Umayyads And Their Allies Ruled Over A Mosaic Of Peoples, Languages And Faiths, First Among Them Christianity, Judaism And The Ancient Religion Of Iran, Zoroastrianism. The Umayyad Period Is Profoundly Different From Ours, Yet It Also Resonates With Modern Concerns, From The Origins Of Islam To Dynamics Of Cultural Exchange.
This collection investigates how the Umayyad dynasty established political legitimacy, cultural identity, and state infrastructure during the formative century of the Islamic empire. Editors Alain George and Andrew Marsham, both established scholars in Islamic history and art, curate a series of essays that analyze the intersection of caliphal authority, architectural patronage, and the administrative evolution of the early Islamic state. By examining both textual evidence and material culture, the contributors argue that the Umayyad period was a sophisticated era of synthesis between late antique traditions and emerging Islamic governance.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of Islamic history frequently cite this volume as a critical resource for understanding the material and political culture of the Umayyad period. Experts note that the text provides a high level of academic rigor, making it a standard reference for those studying the transition from late antiquity to the Islamic era.
Page Count:
368
Publication Date:
2017-12-21
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0190498951
ISBN-13:
9780190498955
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