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book: Between Rebels and Rulers in the Early Islamicate World
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Between Rebels and Rulers in the Early Islamicate World

Power, Contention and Identity
  • Edited by: Hannah-Lena Hagemann and Alasdair C. Grant
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2025
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About this book

Studies rebellion as historical phenomenon and literary construct in early Islamicate contexts

  • Re-centres the long-neglected subject of rebellion in the early Islamic period as a category in its own right
  • Sets out paradigmatic features of early Islamicate rebellion, offering historians in other fields a model for comparative analysis
  • Transcends traditional confessional boundaries in Islamic Studies by putting into conversation scholarship on Sunnī, Shīʿī, Ibāḍī, Khārijite, and non-Muslim revolts
  • Pursues a multidisciplinary approach by bringing together social historians, scholars of religion and literary scholars
  • Embraces case studies from a wide geographical canvas and diverse contexts (e.g., Mashriq and Maghreb; mountains and waterscapes; rural and urban; elites and non-elites)
Between Rebels and Rulers in the Early Islamicate World offers the first dedicated examination of the phenomenon of rebellion across the early Islamicate world. It combines discourse analysis with a return to long-neglected social-historical analysis in its study of contention and the ways in which it was narrated and enacted. These approaches are pursued through fourteen case studies, ranging geographically from North Africa to Central Asia and chronologically from the sixth to tenth centuries CE. These diverse examples reveal several patterns: First, rebellion operated as a normative means of negotiating power and obtaining justice. Second, the main constituencies of rebellion were local elites, both Muslims and non-Muslims, Arabs and members of pre-conquest societies, separately or together. Accordingly, this volume challenges the ‘othering’ of rebels found in written sources and reflected in scholarship and reframes them and their discourses as integral parts of an imperial system. Third, social ties provided a framework for the mobilisation of rebellious constituencies and the resolution of conflict.


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i

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Hannah-Lena Hagemann and Alasdair C. Grant
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1
PART I DISCOURSES OF REBELLION

Marjan Asi
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25

Enki Baptiste and Adam Gaiser
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52
PART II POLITICAL CULTURE OF REBELLION

Natalie Kontny-Wendt
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73

Hannah-Lena Hagemann
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95
PART III CONTENTIOUS COMMUNITIES

Walter Beers
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121

Nimrod Hurvitz
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143
PART IV CONTENDING THE PROVINCE

Alasdair C. Grant
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167

Robert Haug
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191
PART V CONTENDING THE CITY

Alon Dar
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217

Antonia Bosanquet
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239
PART VI DISPUTING PRIVILEGE

Andrew Marsham
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265

Leone Pecorini Goodall
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290
PART VII SPACES OF REBELLION

Muhamed Riyaz Chenganakkattil
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317

Philip Grant
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339

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361

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 31, 2024
eBook ISBN:
9781399530200
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
384
Other:
13 black and white illustrations (3 tables, 9 line figures and 1 map)
Downloaded on 23.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781399530200/html?lang=en
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