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Cover image for Kingship and ideology in the Islamic and Mongol worlds
Title:
Kingship and ideology in the Islamic and Mongol worlds
Series:
Cambridge studies in Islamic civilization
Publication Information:
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2008
Physical Description:
xiv, 232 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780521852654

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
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Material Type
Item Category 1
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30000010336767 DS36.85 B76 2008 Open Access Book Book
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33000000008949 DS36.85 B76 2008 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

What were the attitudes to diplomacy and kingship in the medieval Islamic world? Anne Broadbridge examines struggles over ideology in the Middle East and Central Asia from 1260 to 1405. She explores two very different ideological worlds: the Islamic world of the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt and Syria, and the Mongol world inhabited by the Golden Horde in Central Asia, the Ilkhanids in Iran and Anatolia, the Ilkhanids' successors, and Temür. The relationships among these rival rulers were often highly charged, and diplomatic missions were exchanged in an effort to promote each ruler's ideology. This was the first book to explore what it meant to be a monarch in the pre-modern Islamic world, and how ideas about sovereignty evolved across the period. This groundbreaking work will appeal to scholars of Middle Eastern and Central Asian history, Mongol history, and Islamic history, as well as historians of diplomacy and ideology.


Table of Contents

Introduction
1 The ideology and the diplomacy
2 The establishment of ideologies (1260û1293/ 658û93)
3 The age of Ilkhanid conversion (1295û1316/694û716)
4 The age of patronage and Muslim supremacy (1317û41/717û41)
5 Mamluk regional sovereignty and the post-Ilkhanid order (1335û82/736û84)
6 The Temürid invasions and the destruction of Mamluk sovereignty (1382û1404/784û807)
Epilogue
Bibliography
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