Publications
In this section you find the academic output produced during the project.
forthcoming
Ahmad Khan. “Khurasan”. Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Hg. Kate Fleet et al. Leiden: Brill, forthcoming, S. 2000 words.
Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Peter Verkinderen. “Khārijism in the Umayyad Period”. The Umayyad World. Hg. Andrew Marsham. Routledge, forthcoming
Antonia Bosanquet. “The Prohibition on Non-Muslim Scribes in Aḥkām ahl al-dhimma”. Minorities in Contact in the Medieval Mediterranean. Cultural Encounters in the Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Hg. Luke Yarbrough, Clara Almagro Vidal and Jessica Tearney-Pearce . Turnhout: Brepols, forthcoming
Ahmad Khan. “An Empire of Élites: Mobility in the Early Islamic Empire”. Connecting the Early Islamic Empire: Regional and Transregional Elites . Hg. Hannah-Lena-Hagemann and Stefan Heidemann (eds.). Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: de Gruyter, forthcoming
Peter Verkinderen. “Taxing the Province - Taxation in Early Islamic Fārs”. 38. (forthcoming)
Simon Gundelfinger. “Production and Trade Patterns in Islamic al-Shām and its Vicinities”. 38. (forthcoming)
Antonia Bosanquet. “Shifting Trade Patterns in the ʿAbbāsid Province of Ifrīqiya”. 38. (forthcoming)
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “The Limits of Imperial Control: The Jazīran North in the Early Islamic Period”. 37. (forthcoming)
2020
Hannah-Lena Hagemann, Katharina Mewes & Peter Verkinderen. “Studying Elites in Early Islamic History”. Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. Hg. Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann. Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020
Simon Gundelfinger & Peter Verkinderen. “The Governors of al-Shām and Fārs in the Early Islamic Empire – A Comparative Regional Perspective”. Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. Hg. Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann (eds.). Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Muslim Elites in the Early Islamic Jazīra: The qāḍīs of Ḥarrān, al-Raqqa, and al-Mawṣil”. Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. Hg. Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann. Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020
2018
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Review of Shurāt Legends, Ibāḍī Identities: Martyrdom, Asceticism, and the Making of an Early Islamic Community, by Adam R. Gaiser, Columbia, SC: The University of South Carolina Press, 2016”. Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations 29:4. (2018): S. 534-536.
Ahmad Khan. “Review of T. Bernheimer, The ʿAlids: The First Family of Islam, 750-1200”. Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 95. (2018): S. 201-5.
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Review of Alison Vacca, Non-Muslim Provinces under Early Islam: Islamic Rule and Iranian Legitimacy in Armenia and Caucasian Albania, (CUP, 2017)”. BSOAS 81.2. (2018)
Ahmad Khan. “Review of A. C. S. Peacock and D. Tor (eds.), Medieval Central Asia and the Persianate World: Iranian Tradition and Islamic Civilisation”. Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East (2018)
2016
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Challenging Authority: al-Balādhurī and al-Ṭabarī on Khārijism During the Reign of Muʿāwiya b. Abī Sufyān”. al-Masaq 28.1. (2016): S. 36-56.
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Ahmad Khan. “Islamic Tradition in an Age of Print: Editing, Printing, and Publishing the Classical Heritage”. Reclaiming Islamic Tradition: Modern Interpretations of the Classical Heritage . Hg. A. Khan and E. Kendall (eds.). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016, S. 52-100.
José Haro Peralta & Peter Verkinderen . ““Find for me!”: Building a context-based search tool using Python”. The Digital Humanities and Islamic & Middle East Studies. Hg. Elias Muhanna (ed.),. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016 View Article
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2015
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. History and Memory: Khārijism in Early Islamic Historiography. Edinburgh: 2015. PhD Dissertation, University of Edinburgh, under contract with EUP
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2011
Stefan Heidemann. “The Agricultural Hinterland of Baghdad, al-Raqqa and Samarra': Settlement Patterns in the Diyar Muḍar”. Le Proche-Orient de Justinien aux Abbasides. Peuplement et dynamiques spatiales. Actes du colloque «Continuites de l'occupation entre les periodes byzantine et abbasside au Proche-Orient, VIe-IXe siecles» Paris, 18-20 octobre 2007 (Bibliothèque de l’antiquitè tardive 19). Hg. Antoine Borrut, M Debie, Arietta Papaconstantinou, D. Pieri, Jean-Paul Sodini. Turnhout: Brepols, 2011, S. 43-58. Hinterland
2009
Stefan Heidemann. “Settlement Patterns, Economic Development and Archaeological Coin Finds in Bilād aš-Šām: the Case of the Diyār Mudar - The Process of Transformation from the 6th to the 10th Century A.D”. Residences, Castles, Settlements. Transformation Processes from Late Antiquity to Early Islam in Bilad al-Sham. Proceedings of the International Conference Held at Damascus, 5-9 November 2006. Hg. Karin Bartl, Abd al-Razzaq Moaz. Orient-Archäologie, 24. Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, 2009, S. 493-516. Settlement Patterns (PDF)