Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021)

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Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) 14 records found Search took 0.18 seconds. 
1.
A review of Trajectories of State Formation across Fifteenth-Century Islamic West Asia: Eurasian Parallels, Connections and Divergences (2020), edited by Jo Van Steenberg [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
2.
This article tells the story of al-Mujāhid’s turbulent reign, which occurred during the decline of Rasulid power. Emphasis is placed on the kidnapping episode, which m [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
3.
A set of documents in the State Archives of Florence and the Laurentian Library of Florence related to the exchanges established between that city and the Mamluk Sultanat [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
4.
The clan structure of the Banū Buḥtur is particularly well documented during the third reign of al-Nāṣir Muḥammad. Within this extended family from rural Syria, t [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
5.
Royal women, in spite of the restrictions of seclusion, engaged with the urban space of the Mamluk Sultanate at its capital in Cairo in a variety of ways. Modern scholars [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
6.
The economic history of the medieval Arabic Middle East is difficult to reconstruct. Before the sixteenth century, systematic documentary evidence is lacking on all level [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
7.
Greater Cairo is a megalopolis with nearly 17 million inhabitants. As the city has few green spaces, in 1998 the Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC) launched a project to c [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
8.
This article discusses an early fifteenth-century manuscript of Ibn al-Shāṭir’s Kitāb al-zīj al-jadīd (The new tables for timekeeping). Ibn al-Shāṭir (d. ca. 7 [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
9.
The Mamluk dynasty came to power in a time of great political turmoil in the Islamic world. In the early years of their rule, they engaged in a two-front war against non- [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
10.
This article examines the Mongol origin story presented in Ibn al-Dawādārī’s surviving works, Kanz al-durar and Durar al-tījān, from the perspective of origines ge [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
11.
Jean-Claude Garcin passed away on October 22, 2021. He was 87 years old (October 3, 1934–October 22, 2021).
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
12.
The fields of medieval studies and Jerusalem studies have lost a major scholar this year with the death of Michael Hamilton Burgoyne on 21 September 2021 at the Infirmary [...]Mamlūk Studies Review is an annual (bi-annual from 2003 to 2009), Open Access, refereed journal devoted to the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517). See http: [...]
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
13.
The fields of Religious and Islamic Studies suffered a great loss with the passing of Th. Emil Homerin in Rochester, New York, on December 26, 2020.
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Article |
14.
The Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and Syria, 1250-1517
2021 | Mamlūk Studies Review, Vol. XXIV (2021) | Book |

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