Epigraphy and Theory in the Study of Early Islam

Epigraphy and Theory in the Study of Early Islam portes grátis

Epigraphy and Theory in the Study of Early Islam

Lindstedt, Ilkka

Taylor & Francis Ltd

04/2026

310

Dura

Inglês

9781041146520

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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Chapter 1

Reflections on Method and Theory in the Study of Islam's Origins

Previously unpublished.

Chapter 2

Pre-Islamic Arabia and Early Islam

Herbert Berg (ed.), Routledge Handbook on Early Islam, 159-176, London: Routledge (2018). Reproduced by permission of Taylor & Francis Group.

Chapter 3

The Qur?an and the Putative Pre-Islamic Practice of Female Infanticide

Journal of the International Qur'anic Studies Association 8/1 (2023): 5-29. Reproduced by permission of The International Qur'anic Studies Association.

Chapter 4

Arabic Rock Inscriptions until 750 CE

Andrew Marsham (ed.), The Umayyad World. London: Routledge (2021), 411-437. Reproduced by permission of Taylor & Francis Group

Chapter 5

Religious Groups in the Quran

: Raimo Hakola, Outi Lehtipuu, and Nina Nikki (eds.), Common Ground and Diversity in Early Christian Thought and Study: Essays in Memory of Heikki Raeisaenen, Tuebingen: Mohr Siebeck (2022), 289-311. Reproduced by permission of Mohr Siebeck.

Chapter 6

Signs of Identity in the Quran

Ilkka Lindstedt, Nina Nikki, and Riikka Tuori (eds.), Religious Identities in Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages: Walking Together & Parting Ways, Leiden: Brill (2022), 66-91. Reproduced by permission of Brill.

Chapter 7

"One Community to the Exclusion of Other People" - A Superordinate Identity in the Medinan Community

M.B. Mortensen, G. Dye, T. Tesei, and I. Oliver (eds.), The Study of Islamic Origins: New Perspectives and Contexts, Berlin: De Gruyter (2021), 325-376. Reproduced by permission of De Gruyter.

Chapter 8

Muhajirun as a Name for the First/Seventh Century Muslims

Journal of Near Eastern Studies 74/1 (2015): 67-73. Reproduced by permission of the Journal of Near Eastern Studies.

Chapter 9

Who Is in, Who Is out? Early Muslim Identity through Epigraphy and Theory

Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 46 (2019): 147-246. Reproduced by permission of the Max Schloessinger Memorial Foundation.

Chapter 10

The Last Roman Emperor, the Mahdi, and Jerusalem

Antti Laato (ed.), Understanding the Spiritual Meaning of Jerusalem in Three Abrahamic Religions, Leiden: Brill (2019), 205-225. Reproduced by permission of Brill.
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Pre-Islamic Arabia;Early Christianity;Arabian epigraphy;Constitution of Medina;Arabic historiography;Social identity;Arabic inscriptions;Early Muslims