The Arabs in Antiquity: Their History from the Assyrians to the UmayyadsRoutledge, 04/07/2013 - 704 من الصفحات The history of the Arabs in antiquity from their earliest appearance around 853 BC until the first century of Islam, is described in this book. It traces the mention of people called Arabs in all relevant ancient sources and suggests a new interpretation of their history. It is suggested that the ancient Arabs were more a religious community than an ethnic group, which would explain why the designation 'Arab' could be easily adopted by the early Muslim tribes. The Arabs of antiquity thus resemble the early Islamic Arabs more than is usually assumed, both being united by common bonds of religious ideology and law. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 47
الصفحة xi
... Sabaean studies , and , of course , Arabic and Islamic studies . At the same time Arabia is not a cen- tral area in most of these disciplines . Events there are confronted when they intrude into the fields mentioned . The student who ...
... Sabaean studies , and , of course , Arabic and Islamic studies . At the same time Arabia is not a cen- tral area in most of these disciplines . Events there are confronted when they intrude into the fields mentioned . The student who ...
الصفحة 8
... Sabaean . The pre - Islamic sources are thus in non - domestic languages , except a handful of inscriptions from north and central Arabia , which are of less importance since the word îRB occurs in only a few of them.38 The two groups ...
... Sabaean . The pre - Islamic sources are thus in non - domestic languages , except a handful of inscriptions from north and central Arabia , which are of less importance since the word îRB occurs in only a few of them.38 The two groups ...
الصفحة 31
... Sabaean inscriptions.43 It is documented as a designation for Yemenis , Syrian tribes and a few other groups ( the Panṣār in Medina , the ? Azd and the Tayyi ? tribes ) in texts ascribed to poets who were active in the last decades of ...
... Sabaean inscriptions.43 It is documented as a designation for Yemenis , Syrian tribes and a few other groups ( the Panṣār in Medina , the ? Azd and the Tayyi ? tribes ) in texts ascribed to poets who were active in the last decades of ...
الصفحة 40
... Sabaean inscriptions that Qaḥtan already around AD 200 was known as an area or an ethnic group , probably north of Kinda , i.e. in ¶Asir or Wādi Bisha.110 The Yemenis might thus after all have had some foundation for their claim that ...
... Sabaean inscriptions that Qaḥtan already around AD 200 was known as an area or an ethnic group , probably north of Kinda , i.e. in ¶Asir or Wādi Bisha.110 The Yemenis might thus after all have had some foundation for their claim that ...
الصفحة 55
... Sabaean inscriptions , reigning c . AD 270–310 . 50 al - Yaqubi , Tārikh 1 : 230 f . 51 at - Tabari , Tārīkh I : 2347 ; al - Balādhuri , Futūḥ 135 ; al - Masfūdī , Tanbih 265. See Crone , Qays 48 n . 259 for further examples . For the ...
... Sabaean inscriptions , reigning c . AD 270–310 . 50 al - Yaqubi , Tārikh 1 : 230 f . 51 at - Tabari , Tārīkh I : 2347 ; al - Balādhuri , Futūḥ 135 ; al - Masfūdī , Tanbih 265. See Crone , Qays 48 n . 259 for further examples . For the ...
المحتوى
1 | |
11 | |
Part II THE FORGOTTEN ORIGINS | 103 |
Part III THE SOLUTION OF AN ENIGMA? | 575 |
THE ARABS FROM THE ASSYRIAN S TO THE UMAYYADS | 623 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 627 |
GENERAL INDEX | 668 |
INDEX LOCORUM | 680 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
According Achaemenid afrab Alexander ancient Antiquities árabes arábioi Arabo-Islamic Arabs Aramaic Aretas Arrian Assurbanipal Assyrian at-Tabari Babylonia bedouin belong border called camels campaign Cassius Cassius Dio century BC Chronicles connected conquest cult Damascus Diodorus documented Dumah east Edessa Edom Egypt empire Eratosthenes Euphrates evidence fact farab frankincense Genesis geographical Geschichte Greek groups Gulf Hatra Herodotus Hieronymus idem identical identified inhabitants inscription Iranian Ishmael Islamic Josephus Judaea king kingdom Knauf land language later living meaning mentioned Mesopotamia Muslim Nabataeans Negev nomads northern Old Testament originally Palestine Parthian passage peninsula period Persian Petra Pliny political Posidonius pre-Islamic present-day probably Ptolemy Qedar Qur?an Quraysh Red Sea refer region reign Roman rulers Saba Sabaean ſarab Saracens second century seems Seleucid sources South Arabia southern story Strabo Syria Syrian desert Tārīkh term third century Tiglath Pileser town tradition Transjordan tribes Umayyad Wissmann word Yemenis