Thābit b. Qurra (d. 288/901), a Sabian of Ḥarrān, and his descendants remained in their ancestral religion for six generations. Why did they persist despite pressure to convert? This article argues that religious self-identification as a Sabian could be a distinct advantage in Baghdad's elite circles. It focuses on Thābit's great-grandson Abū Isḥāq Ibrāhīm b. Hilāl al-Ṣābī (d. 384/994) and his poetry as collected by al-Thaʿālibī (d. 429/1038). Two members of the family who did convert are also considered by way of contrast
This article deals with Sufism in Ethiopia, how people came to affiliate themselves to certain Ṣūfī ...
With the expansion of Muslim territory in the ninth century, non-Muslim communities’ reactions to th...
The Islamic polemical tract Kitāb Masālik al-Naẓar reveals much about its author, the Jewish apostat...
Thabit b. Qurra (d. 288/901), a Sabian of Harran, and his descendants remained in their ancestral re...
This article is concerned with the representation of al-ʿAbbās b. al-Walīd’s involvement in the Muha...
The Islamic conquest of the Sasanian Empire inaugurated, among many other transformations, the progr...
Islam, being a universal code of life was revealed by Almighty Allah on his last messenger and belo...
Despite his great influence on modern Salafism and Islamic studies, relatively few works focus on th...
North Africa (west of Egypt) is a compelling locale to explore how and when a Muslim minority became...
With the expansion of Muslim territory in the ninth century, non-Muslim communities’ reactions to th...
The High Middle Ages in Islamic Spain (al-Andalus) is often described as a golden age in which Jews,...
This article tries to see the important points of reading Malay Annals which can be highlighted into...
It is difficult to find equally important event in history as the birth of Islam and Arab expansion,...
The Mongol destruction of Baghdad in 1258 and subsequent Mongol incursions into Syria through the ea...
The tradition is widespread in the Arab world which associates Ishmael and his descendants with Arab...
This article deals with Sufism in Ethiopia, how people came to affiliate themselves to certain Ṣūfī ...
With the expansion of Muslim territory in the ninth century, non-Muslim communities’ reactions to th...
The Islamic polemical tract Kitāb Masālik al-Naẓar reveals much about its author, the Jewish apostat...
Thabit b. Qurra (d. 288/901), a Sabian of Harran, and his descendants remained in their ancestral re...
This article is concerned with the representation of al-ʿAbbās b. al-Walīd’s involvement in the Muha...
The Islamic conquest of the Sasanian Empire inaugurated, among many other transformations, the progr...
Islam, being a universal code of life was revealed by Almighty Allah on his last messenger and belo...
Despite his great influence on modern Salafism and Islamic studies, relatively few works focus on th...
North Africa (west of Egypt) is a compelling locale to explore how and when a Muslim minority became...
With the expansion of Muslim territory in the ninth century, non-Muslim communities’ reactions to th...
The High Middle Ages in Islamic Spain (al-Andalus) is often described as a golden age in which Jews,...
This article tries to see the important points of reading Malay Annals which can be highlighted into...
It is difficult to find equally important event in history as the birth of Islam and Arab expansion,...
The Mongol destruction of Baghdad in 1258 and subsequent Mongol incursions into Syria through the ea...
The tradition is widespread in the Arab world which associates Ishmael and his descendants with Arab...
This article deals with Sufism in Ethiopia, how people came to affiliate themselves to certain Ṣūfī ...
With the expansion of Muslim territory in the ninth century, non-Muslim communities’ reactions to th...
The Islamic polemical tract Kitāb Masālik al-Naẓar reveals much about its author, the Jewish apostat...