Maghāzī文学中勇士先知出现的年代

Adrien de Jarmy
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摘要

1.1“准备全力战斗!”根据al-Wāqidī(公元207/823年)的Kitāb al-maghāzī的记载,这些以第一人称说的话,强调了战斗前的叙事张力,被Muḥammad用来激励穆斯林,因为他们准备在巴德尔面对古莱什(2/624)在maghāzī文本中,著名的战斗,如巴德尔,Uḥud (3/625), al-Khandaq(5/627),2和al-Fātḥ(8/629-30)3是先知使命的亮点。他被描绘成一个勇敢的战士,作为天地之间的代祷者,他的角色对带领信徒们走向胜利起着决定性的作用。我们所拥有的关于Muḥammad生平的最早资料来源是maghāzī,但它们远不是一个一致的文学类型,因为它们包含了不同类型的文本:殉道者名单、诗歌、古兰经ānic解释、类似于圣经中的轶事,当然还有军事远征的叙述。这些文学作品的主要特点是与战争相关的主题无处不在:战争的规则、与异教徒作战的热情、战利品的分配、对被征服民族(主要是书中的人)的刻板印象。Maghāzī文学在倭马亚王朝末期,也就是公元2 / 8世纪的头几十年开始成形:征服逐渐成为人们的记忆,记录伊斯兰历史上军事成功的关键特征的需求出现了。征服的结束为反思伊斯兰教的过去和起源开辟了空间,在倭马亚政权和第一批塑造其记忆的学者之间的密切关系中
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dating the Emergence of the Warrior-Prophet in Maghāzī Literature
1.1 “Prepare to Fight with All Your Might!” These words, spoken in the first person, and emphasising the narrative tension before battle, were used by Muḥammad to galvanise the Muslims as they prepared to face the Quraysh in Badr (2/624), according to the account in the Kitāb al-maghāzī by al-Wāqidī (d. 207/823).1 In maghāzī texts, the famous battles, such as Badr, Uḥud (3/625), al-Khandaq (5/627),2 and al-Fātḥ (8/629–30)3 are the highlights of the Prophet’s mission. He is represented as a valiant warrior, whose role as intercessor between earth and heaven is decisive in bringing the Believers (muʾminīn) to victory. The earliest sources we have on the life of Muḥammad are the maghāzī, but they are far from being a consistent literary genre because they encompass a mix of different types of texts: lists of martyrs, poetry, Qurʾānic explanations, anecdotes resembling those found in the Bible, and of course accounts of military expeditions. The principal characteristic of this literature is the omnipresence of subjects related to war: its rules, the eagerness in combat against the infidels, the distribution of spoils, stereotypes about the peoples who were conquered (mainly the People of the Book). Maghāzī literature began to take shape at the end of the Umayyad era, in the first decades of the second/eighth century: the conquests were receding into memory and the need to write down the key features of historic Islamic military successes arose. The end of the conquests had opened up space for a reflexive discourse on the past and origins of Islam, within the close relationship between Umayyad power and the first scholars to shape its memory.4
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