Non-Muslim Communities in Fatimid Egypt

Whatever happened during fatimid times
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kmaherali
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Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Non-Muslim Communities in Fatimid Egypt

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Non-Muslim Communities in Fatimid Egypt: the dhimmi experience, islamization, and negotiating power
Convened by Maryann M. Shenoda, Mellon Visiting Professor


Sunday, October 2 - Monday, October 3, 2011
Please see schedule below for times
Royce 314
Co-sponsored by the Center for the Study of Religion

This two-day international colloquium will bring together several important scholars who work on non-Muslim (dhimmi) communities in medieval Egypt so as to finally have a conversation about the different dhimmi experiences. This colloquium will provide a forum for scholars of dhimmi communities in Fatimid Egypt (969-1171CE) to discuss the possible overlap, intersection, and differences between the Jewish and Christian experience. More importantly, the colloquium will illuminate the heterogeneity of the dhimmi category which has been typically used as an umbrella term to describe all non-Muslim communities living under Islamic rule.

Schedule

http://www.religion.ucla.edu/index.php/ ... ting-power
kmaherali
Posts: 25106
Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Post by kmaherali »

Shainool Jiwa: Muslim-Christian Engagement in early Fatimid Egypt

The Fatimid conquest of Egypt in 969 CE placed the Ismaili Imam-caliphs at the helm of its diverse ethnic and religious populace. The Christians of Egypt constituted a sizeable proportion of the Egyptian populace, with Copts forming the majority and Melkites and Nestorians constituting significant minorities. The tolerant attitude of the Fatimid Imam-caliphs to their Christian subjects has been long noted in the sources as well as in contemporary scholarship. However, the presumptions underlying the Fatimid attitude have oftentimes been premised on the view that as Shia Ismaili Imams, the Fatimids were a minority regime who had little recourse but to bolster their authority by seeking rapprochement with other significant constituencies, such as the Christians. It is generally held that this was primarily driven by the need to offset the influence of the Sunni majority and to curb the influence of the Abbasid regime, which had previously governed Egypt and continued to exert its influence in the region.

An examination of historical sources on early Fatimid rule in Egypt provides a more informed and nuanced picture. Through a review of the reign of al-‘Azῑz bi’llah (344-386/955-996), the first Fatimid Imam-caliph to begin his rule in Egypt, this lecture will seek to elucidate early Fatimid policies regarding their engagement with the Christians of Egypt. It will illustrate that the Fatimid administration sought to establish a model of governance where the rule of (Fatimid) law was paramount in the public sphere. Within that ambit, all confessional communities could negotiate their involvement in the polity as well as benefit from state-protection regarding their communal functioning, so long as they abided by the norms established by the Fatimids.

http://www.cmcsoxford.org.uk/index.php?pageid=128
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