The academic debate on the ideas and practices that organized succession to the sultanate of Mamluk Egypt and Syria (1250-1517) is long-standing and vexed. This article adds to this debate by bringing in a novel perspective: the “Family-In-Law Impulse.” First, an empirical identification of whom Mamluk sultans between Barqūq (784 AH/1382 CE) and Ḫušqadam (872 AH /1467 CE) married is presented, suggesting that many of these unrelated sultans were connected nonetheless through marriage. The hermeneutics of this observation are then dealt with, by reviewing the possibilities of what these marital ties might mean. It is argued that they reflect one of many strategies aiming at social reproduction: by marrying into their predecessor’s family, ne...
Throughout Islamic history, Islamic schools of law (madhāhib) enjoyed tremendous authority. In addit...
International audienceThe paper aims at reappraising the position of women in wealth holding and tra...
When viewed prosopographically, the marriages of the Umayyad caliphs recorded within the Arabic gene...
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...
Under the influence of popular history, recent historiography on the Ottomans has focused mainly on ...
in dossier thématique Histoires de famille, sous la direction de J. LoiseauInternational audienceIn ...
This article focuses on the conceptualisation of Mamluk socio-political organisation in late thirtee...
This article focuses on adjudication of Muslim family law in countries that range from the Middle Ea...
International audienceMarriage contracts and divorce deeds are of particular importance for historia...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
This article explores the nexus between matrimony, matriarchy and inheritance in Afenmailand using a...
Intermarriages represent a form of social connections that occur for common reasons. However, they m...
From medieval times until today ideas of heredity through lineage and of merit through slave status ...
Throughout Islamic history, Islamic schools of law (madhāhib) enjoyed tremendous authority. In addit...
International audienceThe paper aims at reappraising the position of women in wealth holding and tra...
When viewed prosopographically, the marriages of the Umayyad caliphs recorded within the Arabic gene...
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...
Under the influence of popular history, recent historiography on the Ottomans has focused mainly on ...
in dossier thématique Histoires de famille, sous la direction de J. LoiseauInternational audienceIn ...
This article focuses on the conceptualisation of Mamluk socio-political organisation in late thirtee...
This article focuses on adjudication of Muslim family law in countries that range from the Middle Ea...
International audienceMarriage contracts and divorce deeds are of particular importance for historia...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
This article explores the nexus between matrimony, matriarchy and inheritance in Afenmailand using a...
Intermarriages represent a form of social connections that occur for common reasons. However, they m...
From medieval times until today ideas of heredity through lineage and of merit through slave status ...
Throughout Islamic history, Islamic schools of law (madhāhib) enjoyed tremendous authority. In addit...
International audienceThe paper aims at reappraising the position of women in wealth holding and tra...
When viewed prosopographically, the marriages of the Umayyad caliphs recorded within the Arabic gene...