Power of Islam in Morocco

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A01=Mohamed El Mansour
Abd Allah
Abu Al Qasim
Ahl Al Bayt
Ahmad Al Badawi
Ahmad Ibn
Amir Al Muminin
Author_Mohamed El Mansour
Bayt Al Mal
Category=NH
Category=NHH
Category=NHTB
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Ibn Khaldun
Islamic religiosity
Maghribi history
Maliki Madhhab
Marinid Dynasty
Marinid Sultans
Mawlay Sulayman
Mawlid Celebrations
Moroccan Islam
Moroccan political system
Moroccan proto-nationalism
Moroccan Sultans
Muhammad Ibn
Muhyi Al Din Ibn
Muslim World
pre-colonial society
Prophet's Birthday
Prophet's Descendants
prophetic lineage
Prophet’s Birthday
Prophet’s Descendants
religious legitimacy
rivalry between saints and rulers
saint veneration
Sharifian Descent
spiritual leader
Sufi orders
Sufi Shaykh
Sultan Mawlay
Sunni Madhhab
Twelfth Century Ad

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032177304
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The study of Muslim societies has been for a long time the appanage of western Orientalists and European ethnographers whose view from the outside rarely accounted for the complex reality of these societies. This Variorum volume by an eminent North African historian follows the development of Islam in Morocco as a social phenomenon over the last five centuries. During this period the nature of North African societies and political systems was profoundly changed and shaped by the emergence of a new form of Islamic religiosity based on the glorification of Prophet Muhammad and the veneration of popularly acclaimed saints. From being a purely religious phenomenon, the devotion shown to the Prophet and his lineage turned into a major principle of legitimacy, in both the religious and political fields. In fact, as legitimacy tended to center around the prophetic lineage, Moroccan society witnessed an intense rivalry between saints and sultans, or spiritual and temporal leaders, with the latter trying to keep the saints and the sufis within a strictly religious sphere. This rivalry between the two parties is crucial to the understanding of modern Maghribi history, as well as the present Moroccan political system. (CS1082).

Mohamed El Mansour is senior professor of modern history at Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco. He completed his doctoral studies at The School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK (1981) and his publications include Morocco in the Reign of Mawlay Sulayman (1990) and Morocco Before Colonialization (in Arabic, 2006).

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