The Kharijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition, 9781474450881
Hardcover
Analyses the narrative function of Khrijism in 9th- and 10th-century Islamic historiography

The Kharijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition

Heroes and Villains

$324.60

  • Hardcover

    316 pages

  • Release Date

    22 September 2021

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Summary

Why are stories told about the Khrijites? The Islamic tradition portrays Khrijism as a heretical movement of militantly pious zealots, a notion largely reiterated by what little there is of modern scholarship on the Khrijites. Hannah-Lena Hagemann moves away from the usual studies of Khrijite history ‘as it really was’ and instead examines its narrative function in early Islamic historiography. From the Khrijites’ origins at the Battle of iffn in 657 CE until the death of the caliph Abd al…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781474450881
ISBN-10:1474450881
Author:Hannah-Lena Hagemann
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:Edinburgh University Press
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:316
Release Date:22 September 2021
Weight:642g
Dimensions:234mm x 156mm
Series:Edinburgh Studies in Classical Islamic History and Culture
What They're Saying

Critics Review

This book is an invaluable contribution to the scholarship of early Islam: a stimulating work on the origin of the Khārijites, groups that were known in the first century of Islam for their uncompromising piety and unparalleled violence. Hagemann offers a stimulating new interpretation of the historical tradition of Khārijite history. * Dr Teresa Bernheimer, LMU Munich *[…] this book is an excellent discussion of early Arabic historiography which should be read by everyone with a serious interest in the subject. Lucid and well-informed, both established scholars and students will find interest and inspiration here. – Hugh Kennedy * Journal of Qur’anic Studies *Hagemann’s work makes a useful contribution to our understanding of the Kharijites’ role in early Islamic historiography and adds to the growing body of work focusing on literary aspects of the narrative historical sources. – Steven C. Judd * Journal of the American Oriental Society *The Kharijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition is a welcome addition to the scholarship on early Islamic history, Islamic historiography, the Islamic literary tradition, and Islamic sects and sectarianism. Hagemann provides a comprehensive, historicized analysis of how Muslim historians in the first few centuries of Islamic history understood the Kharijites and Kharijism and, as importantly, how and why they developed and their views and disseminated them. – Christopher Anzalone, George Mason University * The Muslim World Book Review, 42:3 *

About The Author

Hannah-Lena Hagemann

Hannah-Lena Hagemann is the Principal Investigator of the Emmy Noether research group “Social Contexts of Rebellion in the Early Islamic Period” (SCORE) at the University of Hamburg. She is author of The Khārijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition (Edinburgh University Press, 2021) and co-editor (with Stefan Heidemann) of Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire (De Gruyter, 2020).

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