Scholarship on the city in the Islamic world has generally played down the autonomy and collective agency of cities. This article explores the case of Anatolia, usually neglected in discussions of Islamic urbanism, focusing on the Seljuq period of the 13th century. While much scholarship on Anatolia acknowledges the role of futuwwa (trade-based confraternities somewhat analogous to guilds), I argue the independence of these organisations has been overestimated, for many were closely linked to sultanic power. The paper suggests that in fact power was negotiated between rulers and urban notables (a‘yān), who had considerable autonomy and who brokered binding contracts (sawgandnāmas) with sultans that expressed their rights and obligations. A‘...
This paper attempts to identify the focal point of the Anatolian urban network and transportation sy...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...
Scholarship on the city in the Islamic world has generally played down the autonomy and collective a...
Scholarship on the city in the Islamic world has generally played down the autonomy and collective a...
After the Battle of Manzikert (1071), in which the armies of the Great Seljuqs defeated the Byzantin...
There is no single totalising modern historiographical narrative for thirteenth- and fourteenth-cent...
In the medieval period, the city of Ahlat was an important urban center in the Lake Van region. The ...
There is no single totalising modern historiographical narrative for thirteenth- and fourteenth-cent...
This article addresses the themes of urban agency and state-centrism by analysing the agency of merc...
This article addresses the themes of urban agency and state-centrism by analysing the agency of merc...
This dissertation is the first comprehensive study of the phenomenon of the urban confraternity...
This dissertation argues for the historical agency of the North Anatolian city of Amasya through an ...
Chrysobulls issued »in common« to the inhabitants of cities, together with a large number of other s...
Chrysobulls issued »in common« to the inhabitants of cities, together with a large number of other s...
This paper attempts to identify the focal point of the Anatolian urban network and transportation sy...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...
Scholarship on the city in the Islamic world has generally played down the autonomy and collective a...
Scholarship on the city in the Islamic world has generally played down the autonomy and collective a...
After the Battle of Manzikert (1071), in which the armies of the Great Seljuqs defeated the Byzantin...
There is no single totalising modern historiographical narrative for thirteenth- and fourteenth-cent...
In the medieval period, the city of Ahlat was an important urban center in the Lake Van region. The ...
There is no single totalising modern historiographical narrative for thirteenth- and fourteenth-cent...
This article addresses the themes of urban agency and state-centrism by analysing the agency of merc...
This article addresses the themes of urban agency and state-centrism by analysing the agency of merc...
This dissertation is the first comprehensive study of the phenomenon of the urban confraternity...
This dissertation argues for the historical agency of the North Anatolian city of Amasya through an ...
Chrysobulls issued »in common« to the inhabitants of cities, together with a large number of other s...
Chrysobulls issued »in common« to the inhabitants of cities, together with a large number of other s...
This paper attempts to identify the focal point of the Anatolian urban network and transportation sy...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...
International audienceThis chapter examines how urban populations in early Islam identified themselv...