A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period

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Jamil M. Abun-Nasr
Cambridge University Press, 20 ago 1987 - 455 páginas
Building on the two previous editions of his History of the Maghrib, Professor Abun-Nasr has written a completely new history of North Africa within the Islamic period which begins with the Arab conquest and brings the story up to the present day. He emphasises the factors which led to the adoption of Islam by practically the entire population, the geographical position of the area, which made it the main trade link between the Mediterranean world and the Sudan and led to its involvement in the confrontation between the Christian and Islamic worlds. In Morocco, this confrontation led to the emergence of a distinct religio-political community ruled by sharifian dynasties and, in the rest of the Maghrib, to integration in the Ottoman empire. The political and economic developments of the 'piratical' regencies of Algeria, Tunisia and Libya, the establishment of European colonial rule, the nationalist movements and Islamic religious reform are all treated in detail. The balance between factual account and interpretation makes the book especially useful to students of African and Islamic history.
 

Índice

Introduction
1
the establishment of Islam in the Maghrib and Spain
26
The Maghrib under Berber dynasties
76
Ottoman rule in the Central and Eastern Maghrib
144
Morocco consolidates her national identity 15101822
206
The Maghrib in the age of aggressive European colonialism 18301914
248
The Maghrib 1919 to independence
324
the Maghrib after independence
408
Bibliography
429
Index
440
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