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Sharīʿa in the Russian Empire

Editat de Paolo Sartori, Danielle Ross
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 feb 2020
This book looks at how Islamic law was practiced in Russia from the conquest of the empire's first Muslim territories in the mid-1500s to the Russian Revolution of 1917, when the empire's Muslim population had exceeded 20 million. It focuses on the training of Russian Muslim jurists, the debates over legal authority within Muslim communities and the relationship between Islamic law and 'customary' law. Based upon difficult to access sources written in a variety of languages (Arabic, Chaghatay, Kazakh, Persian, Tatar), it offers scholars of Russian history, Islamic history and colonial history an account of Islamic law in Russia of the same quality and detail as the scholarship currently available on Islam in the British and French colonial empires.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781474444293
ISBN-10: 1474444296
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 157 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS

Cuprins

Introduction: The Reach and Limits of Shari¿a in the Russian Empire, ca. 1552-1917, Danielle Ross and Paolo Sartori; 1. Islamic Education for All: Technological Change, Popular Literacy, and the Transformation of the Volga-Ural Madrasa, 1650s-1910s, Danielle Ross; 2.Taqlid and Discontinuity: The Transformation of Islamic Legal Authority in the Volga-Ural Region, Nathan Spannaus; 3. Debunking the 'Unfortunate Girl' Paradigm: Volga-Ural Muslim Women's Knowledge Culture and its Transformation across the Long Nineteenth Century, Danielle Ross; 4. Between Imperial Law and Islamic Law: Muslim Subjects and the Legality of Remarriage in Nineteenth-Century Russia, Rozaliya Garipova; 5. Islamic Scholars among the Kereys of Northern Kazakhstan, 1680-1850, Allen J. Frank; 6. Tinkering with Codification in the Kazakh Steppe: ¿Adat and Shari¿a in the work of Efim Osmolovskii, Pavel Shabley and Paolo Sartori; 7. Taqlid and Ijtihad over the Centuries: The Debates on the Islamic Legal Theory in Daghestan, 1700s-1920s, Shamil Shikhaliev; 8. Kunta ¿ajji and the Stolen Horse, Michael Kemper and Shamil Sh. Shikhaliev; 9. What We Talk about When We Talk about Taqlid in Russian Central Asia, Paolo Sartori; 10. Take Me to Khiva: Shari¿a as Governance in the Oasis of Khorezm (19th-Early 20th Centuries), Ulfat Abdurasulov and Paolo Sartori.

Notă biografică

Paolo Sartori is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Iranian Studies, Austrian Academy of Sciences. He is the editor of the Brill series Handbooks of Oriental Studies (Section 8 Uralic & Central Asian Studies) and is editor in chief of the Journal of Economic and Social History of the Orient (Brill). He is author of Visions of Justice: Shari¿a and Cultural Change in Russian Central Asia (Brill, 2016).
Danielle Ross is Assistant Professor of Asian History in the Department of History at Utah State University. She has published a chapter in Small Nations and Colonial Peripheries in World War I (Brill, 2016).