不断变化的权力中心

P. Wood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本章考察了前伊斯兰精英是如何存活到9世纪的,以及古代对教会权威的主张是如何与阿拉伯征服者在中东建立的新定居点发生冲突的。它将伊拉克南部的库法和巴士拉以及埃及的福斯塔描述为最著名的定居点,后来又有一些较小的中心加入其中,如瓦西特、梅夫、设拉子和摩苏尔。它还提到amṣār的征服者从税收产生的收入中获得现金津贴,这反过来又组织了伊斯兰司法和治理。本章确定了阿拉伯人在中东统治的前三个世纪中权力地理变化的三个趋势。它包括向少数几个重要城市的转变,政府日益集中,以及权力中心的移动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Changing Centres of Power
This chapter examines how pre-Islamic elites survived into the ninth century and how ancient claims to ecclesiastical authority came into conflict with the new settlements created by the Arab conquerors of the Middle East. It describes the Kufa and Basra in southern Iraq and Fustat in Egypt as the most famous settlements, which were later joined by smaller centres such as Wasit, Merv, Shiraz, and Mosul. It also mentions conquerors in the amṣār that were paid cash stipends from the revenue generated by taxes, which in turn organized Islamic justice and governance. The chapter identifies three trends in the changing geography of power in the first three centuries of Arab rule in the Middle East. It includes the shift toward a small number of significant cities, the growing centralization of government, and the movement of the centre of power.
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