Preface |
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x | |
Introduction |
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xii | |
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The Rise of Islam and Life of the Prophet Muhammad |
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1 | (18) |
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The Constitution of Medina |
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4 | (3) |
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7 | (3) |
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The Treaty of al-Hudaybiyya |
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10 | (1) |
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10 | (3) |
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13 | (3) |
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Remembering the Prophet, the Beloved of God |
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16 | (3) |
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The Issue of Succession to the Prophet |
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19 | (8) |
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Early tension between kinship and individual moral excellence |
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22 | (4) |
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Why did the Prophet not indicate a successor? |
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26 | (1) |
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The Age of the Rightly-Guided Caliphs |
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27 | (20) |
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Abu Bakr, the first caliph |
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27 | (3) |
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'Umar ibn al-Khattab, the second caliph |
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30 | (17) |
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The End of Rightly-Guided Leadership |
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47 | (12) |
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47 | (1) |
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The collection of the Qur'an |
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48 | (2) |
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Toward fragmentation of the community |
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50 | (1) |
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The caliphate of 'Ali ibn Abi Talib |
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51 | (1) |
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52 | (2) |
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The legacy of the era of the Rightly-Guided Caliphs |
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54 | (5) |
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The Age of the Companions |
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59 | (17) |
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Ibn 'Abbas: the sage of the Muslim community |
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61 | (2) |
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Ibn Mas 'ud: interpreter of the Word of God |
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63 | (3) |
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'A' isha bint Abi Bakr: the beloved of Muhammad |
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66 | (4) |
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Umm 'Umara: valiant defender of the Prophet |
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70 | (1) |
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Bilal ibn Rabah: the voice of Islam |
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71 | (2) |
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73 | (3) |
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The Age of the Successors |
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76 | (30) |
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76 | (5) |
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The politics of piety and the second civil war |
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81 | (4) |
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85 | (2) |
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87 | (3) |
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90 | (5) |
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The consolidation of Shi'i thought |
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95 | (3) |
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The rise of law and jurisprudence among the early Sunnis |
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98 | (8) |
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The Successors to the Successors I: Administration, Leadership, and Jihad |
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106 | (23) |
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106 | (1) |
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Statecraft, administration, and leadership: acquiring a Persian flavor |
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107 | (1) |
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The concept of jihad: Qur'anic antecedents and the classical juridical doctrine |
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108 | (1) |
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Reading the Qur' an in context |
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109 | (6) |
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Later understandings of jihad |
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115 | (1) |
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Negotiating the polyvalence of the term jihad |
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116 | (4) |
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120 | (3) |
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Changes in conceptions of leadership |
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123 | (6) |
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The Successors to the Successors II: Humanism, Law, and Mystical Spirituality |
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129 | (19) |
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129 | (8) |
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The flourishing of law and jurisprudence |
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137 | (5) |
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The rise of tasawwuf (Sufism) |
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142 | (6) |
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Constructing the Pious Forbears I: Historical Memory and the Present |
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148 | (20) |
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The Islamist construction |
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148 | (4) |
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Implications and relevance of studying the lives of the first Muslims today |
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152 | (3) |
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The Salaf al-Salih in the Islamist imagination |
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155 | (13) |
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Constructing the Pious Forbears II: Historical Memory and the Present |
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168 | (15) |
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The significance of the Salaf al-Salih for the modernists |
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168 | (15) |
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Assessment of Islamist and Modernist Views |
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183 | (13) |
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183 | (4) |
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The pervasiveness of the religious law and its scope |
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187 | (3) |
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190 | (2) |
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192 | (4) |
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196 | (4) |
Endnotes |
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200 | (31) |
Select Bibliography |
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231 | (8) |
Glossary |
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239 | (4) |
General Index |
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243 | |