Becoming Arab

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?antar
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A01=Yossef Rapoport
Agricultural
Al
Arab
Arab village
Arabic
Author_Yossef Rapoport
Ayyubid
Banu
Bedouin
Category=NHAH
Category=NHG
Century
Christian
Clans
Communities
Countryside
Delta
Din
Egyptian
Eleventh
Elites
Epic
eq_bestseller
eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
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Evidence
Fatimid
Fayyum
Fifteenth
Force
Fourteenth
Genealogical
Governor
Groups
Headmen
Ibn
Ibn al
Identity
Iq?a?
Islamic
Land
Lineage
Mamluk
Maqrizi
Medieval
Military
Modern
Muslim
Narrative
Official
Palestine
Peasantry
Peasants
Power
Protection
Protectors
Province
Provincial
Qalqashandi
Qays yaman
Rural
Sources
Syria
Syrian
Tax
Thirteenth
Tribal
Tribes
Twelfth
Upper
Village
Villagers
Wa
Wares

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691210636
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How late medieval Middle Eastern peasants adopted Arab cultural identities and formed village clans

During the later Middle Ages, peasants in Egypt and Greater Syria came to view themselves as members of Arab clans that had originated in the Arabian Peninsula. They expressed their Arab identity by wearing Arab headgear, adopting an Arab dialect, and circulating a new genre of popular epic that told heroic tales of pre-Islamic Arabia. In Becoming Arab, Yossef Rapoport argues that this proliferation of Arab village clans did not come about through mass migration and displacement but reflected an internal transformation. Drawing on extensive documentary, literary, administrative, and material evidence, Rapoport shows that the widespread formation of Arab village clans in late medieval Egypt and Greater Syria was a gradual process, the result of mass rural conversion to Islam and a new landholding regime in which peasants shifted from being landowners to being tenants. After the eleventh century, Rapoport contends, Middle Eastern villagers were turning Arab.

These Arab village clans were not merely administrative regimes imposed from above; villagers enthusiastically embraced their new identities. New converts to Islam adopted Arab lineages to claim status and as a counter-identity to urban-based Turkish elites. Arab identity was used by clans to mobilize rural uprisings against the ruling sultans and to resolve disputes among villagers. Challenging traditional historiography of the Middle East, which views Arab clansmen as pastoralists whose identity separated them from that of the wider peasantry, Rapoport argues that the pervasive establishment of Arab village clans was the most important development in the history of the Middle Eastern countryside in the Islamic era.

Yossef Rapoport is professor of Islamic history at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author of Marriage, Money and Divorce in Medieval Islamic Society; Rural Economy and Tribal Society in Islamic Egypt; and Islamic Maps.