Chapter
        
        
            
                    
        Publicly Available
    
                
        
        
            
            
                
            
            
            
            
            
            
        
    
    
    Acknowledgements
- 
            
            
        Christian Lange
        
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Abbreviations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Introduction: Spatial, ritual and representational aspects of public violence in Islamic societies (7th–19th centuries CE) 1
- 
                            PART I Public violence and the construction of the public sphere
- 1 The case of Jaʿd b. Dirham and the punishment of ‘heretics’ in the early caliphate 27
- 2 Qāḍīs and the political use of the maẓālim jurisdiction under the ʿAbbāsids 42
- 3 From revolutionary violence to state violence: the Fāṭimids (297–567/909–1171) 67
- 4 Actions speak louder than words: reactions to lampoons and abusive poetry in medieval Arabic society 87
- 
                            PART II Ritual dimensions of violence
- 5 Reveal or conceal: public humiliation and banishment as punishments in early Islamic times 119
- 6 Emulating Abraham: the Fāṭimid al-Qāʾim and the Umayyad ʿAbd al-Raḥmān III 130
- 7 Where on earth is hell? State punishment and eschatology in the Islamic middle period 156
- 8 Justice, crime and punishment in 10th/16th-century Morocco 179
- 
                            PART III Representations of public violence
- 9 Responses to crucifixion in the Islamic world (1st–7th/7th–13th centuries) 203
- 10 Violence and the prince: the case of the Aghlabid Amīr Ibrāhīm II (261–89/875–902) 217
- 11 Concepts of justice and the catalogue of punishments under the Sultans of Delhi (7th–8th/13th–14th centuries) 238
- 12 Public violence, state legitimacy: the Iqāmat al-ḥudūd and the sacred state 256
- 13 Violence in Islamic societies through the eyes of non-Muslim travellers: Morocco in the 19th and early 20th centuries 276
- Index 292
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Abbreviations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Introduction: Spatial, ritual and representational aspects of public violence in Islamic societies (7th–19th centuries CE) 1
- 
                            PART I Public violence and the construction of the public sphere
- 1 The case of Jaʿd b. Dirham and the punishment of ‘heretics’ in the early caliphate 27
- 2 Qāḍīs and the political use of the maẓālim jurisdiction under the ʿAbbāsids 42
- 3 From revolutionary violence to state violence: the Fāṭimids (297–567/909–1171) 67
- 4 Actions speak louder than words: reactions to lampoons and abusive poetry in medieval Arabic society 87
- 
                            PART II Ritual dimensions of violence
- 5 Reveal or conceal: public humiliation and banishment as punishments in early Islamic times 119
- 6 Emulating Abraham: the Fāṭimid al-Qāʾim and the Umayyad ʿAbd al-Raḥmān III 130
- 7 Where on earth is hell? State punishment and eschatology in the Islamic middle period 156
- 8 Justice, crime and punishment in 10th/16th-century Morocco 179
- 
                            PART III Representations of public violence
- 9 Responses to crucifixion in the Islamic world (1st–7th/7th–13th centuries) 203
- 10 Violence and the prince: the case of the Aghlabid Amīr Ibrāhīm II (261–89/875–902) 217
- 11 Concepts of justice and the catalogue of punishments under the Sultans of Delhi (7th–8th/13th–14th centuries) 238
- 12 Public violence, state legitimacy: the Iqāmat al-ḥudūd and the sacred state 256
- 13 Violence in Islamic societies through the eyes of non-Muslim travellers: Morocco in the 19th and early 20th centuries 276
- Index 292