This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-century Cairo.1 Following a discussion of the size and growth of the Abbasid family, the article juxtaposes a late fourteenth-century marriage document, which extolls the virtues of unions made with the caliph’s family, against the historical record of marriages made by Abbasid and non-Abbasid spouses in search of social capital. The study seeks to understand the meaning attached to marriages made with Abbasid family members, and the social advantages the caliphal family hoped to gain in return. By thus reconsidering the role of Abbasid concubines and princesses, we challenge preconceived notions about the agency and mobility of Abbasid family me...
This dissertation investigates the two-and-a-half century evolution of Islam’s most prominent leader...
International audienceMarriage contracts and divorce deeds are of particular importance for historia...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
This article contains information on the role of women in public life during the reign of the Mamluk...
This article portrays the life of Al-Sit Nafisa Khatun al-Muradiyya, originally taken captive in Geo...
In a history written by men, women are typically assigned minimal agency, hardly indicative of their...
The Abbasid state (132-656 AH) has a special importance in human history because it is one of the la...
International audienceThe paper aims at reappraising the position of women in wealth holding and tra...
in dossier thématique Histoires de famille, sous la direction de J. LoiseauInternational audienceIn ...
The subject of the position of women has developed considerably over the last few years, expanding o...
The academic debate on the ideas and practices that organized succession to the sultanate of Mamluk ...
The clan structure of the Banū Buḥtur is particularly well documented during the third reign of al-N...
A statistical analysis of an early Arabic text, Nasab Quraysh of al-Zubayri (d.c. 850), is used to e...
The history of women in Arabia is a relatively new and unexplored area of research and the place of ...
This dissertation investigates the two-and-a-half century evolution of Islam’s most prominent leader...
International audienceMarriage contracts and divorce deeds are of particular importance for historia...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
This article contains information on the role of women in public life during the reign of the Mamluk...
This article portrays the life of Al-Sit Nafisa Khatun al-Muradiyya, originally taken captive in Geo...
In a history written by men, women are typically assigned minimal agency, hardly indicative of their...
The Abbasid state (132-656 AH) has a special importance in human history because it is one of the la...
International audienceThe paper aims at reappraising the position of women in wealth holding and tra...
in dossier thématique Histoires de famille, sous la direction de J. LoiseauInternational audienceIn ...
The subject of the position of women has developed considerably over the last few years, expanding o...
The academic debate on the ideas and practices that organized succession to the sultanate of Mamluk ...
The clan structure of the Banū Buḥtur is particularly well documented during the third reign of al-N...
A statistical analysis of an early Arabic text, Nasab Quraysh of al-Zubayri (d.c. 850), is used to e...
The history of women in Arabia is a relatively new and unexplored area of research and the place of ...
This dissertation investigates the two-and-a-half century evolution of Islam’s most prominent leader...
International audienceMarriage contracts and divorce deeds are of particular importance for historia...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...