Editorial: Edinburgh University Press
Colección: Edinburgh Studies in Classical Islamic History and Culture
Número de páginas: 336 págs. 23.4 x 15.6 cm
Fecha de edición: 01-05-2025
EAN: 9781474492263
ISBN: 978-1-4744-9226-3
Precio (sin IVA): 130,06 €
Precio (IVA incluído): 135,26 €
Offers the first book-length study of archiving in the Cairo sultanate
.- Examines the relationship between waqf endowments and archiving
.- Delineates the largest extant archive from the pre-Ottoman Middle East: the waqf archive of sultan al-Ghawr?
.- Calls for scholarly attention to the preservation trajectories of documents, with methodological implications for historians of all world regions and historical periods
.- Presents a document-led history of late-Mamluk society
Archives are not only sources for history but have their own histories too, which shape how historians can tell stories of the past. This book explores the archival history of one of the most powerful polities of the late-medieval Middle East: the ‘Mamluk’ sultanate of Cairo. Relying on surviving original documents, it focuses on archival practices connected to waqf, the pious endowments that became one of the characteristic features of late-medieval Islamic societies. By centring a close exploration of documents connected to processes of endowment and property exchange, this book sheds light on a startling culture of document accumulation that was shared by the diverse social groups involved in founding and managing endowments: sultans and emirs, qadis, legal notaries, and scribes. Emphasising the documents’ life cycles from production, to preservation, to disposal and loss, it argues for the use of surviving documents to tell their own archival histories.