000 02032cab a2200385 i 4500
001 a440601
003 SIRSI
008 110826s2011 xxk 000 0 eng d
009 440601
035 _a1459118337
040 _aFRAS
_bfre
_cFRAS
_dFRAS
_eAFNOR
043 _ae-sp---
_bAl Andalus
072 _aOM
082 0 4 _a956.0651072
_220A
084 _a956.065
100 1 _aClarke, Nicola
_eAuteur
_4070
_9295701
245 1 0 _aMedieval Arabic accounts of the conquest of cordoba :
_bcreating a narrative for a provincial capital /
_cNicola Clarke
300 _ap. 41-57
504 _aNotes bibliogr.
520 _aLike most early Islamic history writing, the tradition surrounding the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula in 711 is the product of later debates and priorities rather than a true reflection of eighth-century circumstances. Rather than seek to reconstruct what is lost, this article explores what the sources have to tell us about these later priorities: that is, what the authors, their patrons and their wider environment valued in the history that they retold. Its focus is the conquest of Cordoba, narratives about which entered the tradition in the tenth century, as a result of the patronage of history writing by the Umayyad caliphs ʻAbd al-Raḥmān III (r. 912-61) and al-Ḥakam II (r. 961-76). These tenth-century narratives are expressions of both caliphal ideology and the writers' own status in their society
650 4 _aCONQUETE ISLAMIQUE
_92879
650 4 _aHISTORIOGRAPHIE
_92162
651 4 _aCORDOUE
_92855
651 4 _aAL ANDALUS
_91404
773 0 _tBulletin of the School of Oriental and African studies. -
_gVol. 74, n. 1, 2011, p. 41-57. -
_dLondon : Oxford University Press, 1917-. -
_xISSN 0041-977X. -
_oCote de la revue :A2 39. -
_w2685
856 0 _uhttp://www.fondation.org.ma/dsp/index/a440601-21
930 _a440601
931 _aa440601
990 _aEl Basri
990 _aEl Basri
095 _amr
999 _c447303
_d447303