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El. knyga: Mamluks and Crusaders: Men of the Sword and Men of the Pen [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Mamluks and Crusaders: Men of the Sword and Men of the Pen brings together a series of studies, based mainly on medieval Arabic sources, of Middle Eastern history and society in the late Middle Ages. Several of these studies deal with the confrontation between the Mamluks and the Crusaders. Others deal with aspects of Mamluk society and culture in Egypt and Syria from the 13th to the early 16th centuries. There are articles on such matters as Crusader feudalism and Mamluk iqta', Crusader and Mamluk currency, the last years of the Crusader states, Mamluk faction fighting, the size of the Mamluk army, the image of the Crusaders and other Europeans in Arabic popular literature, a neglected source on the sex life of the Mamluks, the ritual consumption of horse meat by Mamluks and Mongols, the table talk of the Mamluk Sultan Qansuh al-Ghawri, the deployment of gunpowder and firearms in the Middle East, gangsterism in Cairo and the shared interest of Ibn Khaldun and al-Maqrizi in the occult. Finally, several studies deal with questions of historiography, in both Crusader and Mamluk studies.
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
I Iqta' and the end of the Crusader states
62(11)
P.M. Holt
II The supply of money and the direction of trade in thirteenth-century Syria
73(173)
P.W. Edbury
D.M. Metcalf
III The Mamluk conquest of the county of Tripoli Crusade and Settlement
246
P.W. Edbury
IV Egypt, Syria and their trading partners 1450-1550
73(155)
R. Pinner
W.B. Denny
V Factions in medieval Egypt
228
VI The image of the Byzantine and the Frank in Arab popular literature of the late Middle Ages
226
B. Arbel
B. Hamilton
D. Jacoby
VII How many miles to Babylon? The Devise des Chemins de Babiloine redated
57(404)
M. Barber. Aldershot
VIII Toynbee and Ibn Khaldun
461
IX Eating horses and drinking mare's milk
1(70)
D. Alexander
X Usamah ibn Munqidh, an Arab-Syrian gentleman at the time of the crusades reconsidered
71(66)
J. France
W.G. Zajac
XI The impact of the early crusades on the Muslim world
137
L. Garcia-Guijarro Ramos
XII What the partridge told the eagle: a neglected Arabic source on Chinggis Khan and the early history of the Mongols
5(22)
R. Amitai-Preiss
D.O. Morgan
XIII Under western eyes: a history of Mamluk studies
27(18)
XIV `Ali al-Baghdadi and the joy of Mamluk sex
45(18)
H. Kennedy
XV The privatisation of `justice' under the Circassian Mamluks
63
XVI Mamluk literature
1(213)
XVII Orientalism and the early development of crusader studies
214(37)
Edbury
J. Phillips
XVIII Tribal feuding and Mamluk factions in medieval Syria
251
C.F. Robinson
XIX Al-Maqrizi and Ibn Khaldun, historians of the unseen
217
XX Gunpowder and firearms in the Mamluk Sultanate reconsidered
117(44)
M. Winter
A. Levanoni
XXI Futuwwa: chivalry and gangsterism in medieval Cairo
161
XXII Ibn Zunbul and the romance of history
3(34)
J. Bray. London
XXIII The political thinking of the `virtuous ruler', Qansuh al-Ghawri
37
Index 1
Robert Irwin was formerly a lecturer in the Department of Mediaeval History in the University of St Andrews