id |
eprints-6097
|
recordtype |
eprints
|
institution |
SOAS, University of London
|
collection |
SOAS Research Online
|
language |
English
|
language_search |
English
|
description |
Under-age rule started to play a salient role in the central Islamic lands during the late and post-Abbasid periods. The rule of children implied a potential instability which had to be compensated for. Considering the Ayyubid dynasty as an example it can be argued that in this period (1) under-age rule is mainly a non-legal concept, which has to be supplemented by the concepts of ‘independent rule’ and ‘prolonged under-age rule’, (2) under-age rule was taken seriously as a prelude to the following independent rule without regents striving to instrumentalise the under-age ruler for their own quest for power, (3) the uneven distribution of under-age rule among the Ayyubid principalities can be explained by the period’s flexible system of succession.
|
format |
Journal Article
|
author |
Hirschler, Konrad
|
author_facet |
Hirschler, Konrad
|
authorStr |
Hirschler, Konrad
|
author_letter |
Hirschler, Konrad
|
title |
"He is a child and this land is a borderland of Islam": Under-Age Rule and the Quest for Political Stability in the Ayyubid Period
|
publisher |
Taylor and Francis
|
publishDate |
2007
|
url |
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/6097/
|