Slavery touched many aspects of Mamluk society. This volume focuses on the role of slaves within the family, from birth to purchase, liberation, and death. It investigates domestic slavery in Syrian and Egyptian society from the thirteenth to the fifteenth century. Jan Hagedorn focuses on the agency of slaves in the context of master-slave relationships within households and in wider society. He argues that the ability of slaves to shape the world around them was underpinned by a constant process of negotiation within the master-slave relationship and that intermediaries such as the court system channelled the agency of slaves. The principal sources for this study are purchase contracts, listening certificates, marriage contracts, and estate inventories in combination with scribal, market inspection, and slave purchase manuals as well as chronicles.
Mamluk Historiography Revisited – Narratological Perspectives
bookHistory and Society during the Mamluk Period (1250–1517) : Studies of the Annemarie Schimmel Institute for Advanced Study III
bookHistory and Society during the Mamluk Period (1250–1517) : Studies of the Annemarie Schimmel Institute for Advanced Study II
bookEverything is on the Move : The Mamluk Empire as a Node in (Trans-)Regional Networks
bookState formation and the structure of politics in Mamluk Syro-Egypt, 648–741 A.H./1250–1340 C.E.
Winslow Williams Clifford
bookMaqāmat al-Naṣr fī Manāqīb Imām al-ʿAṣr
Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al-Zamlakānī
bookat-Tarāǧim al-ǧalīla al-ǧaliyya wa-l-ašyāḫ al-ʿāliya al-ʿaliyya
Aḥmad Aybak Ibn Aybak ad-Dumyāṭī
bookAl-Qaul al-mu'ab fi l-qada' bi l-mugab
Souad Saghbini
bookThe Rise and Fall of a Muslim Regiment : The Manṣūriyya in the First Mamluk Sultanate, 678/1279–741/1341
Amir Mazor
bookIslamic Philosophy from the 12th to the 14th Century
book