توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Breaching the Bronze Wall: Franks at Mamluk and Ottoman Courts and Markets
نام کتاب : Breaching the Bronze Wall: Franks at Mamluk and Ottoman Courts and Markets
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : شکستن دیوار برنزی: فرانک ها در دادگاه ها و بازارهای ممالیک و عثمانی
سری : Mediterranean Reconfigurations, 2
نویسندگان : Francisco Apellaniz
ناشر : Brill
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 342
ISBN (شابک) : 9789004431737 , 9789004382749
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 26 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1 Structure of the Book
Chapter 2 Producing, Handling and Archiving Evidence in Mediterranean Societies
2.1 The ‘Archival Divide’
2.1.1 A Threefold Problem
a) Justice
b) Textuality
c) Notarization
2.1.2 Materialist Explanations
2.1.3 Non-Materialist Explanations
2.2 Islamic Notions and Doctrines on Proof and Evidence
2.2.1 Archive Transmission
2.2.2 Was the qimaṭr an Archive?
2.2.3 The Sijill: from Scroll to Codex
2.3 Notaries in the Cross-Confessional Middle Ages
2.3.1 Mediterranean Notarial Traditions
2.3.2 Legal Fiction and Roman Ancestry
2.4 The Case of the Outremer Notaries
2.4.1 Merchants and Notaries in the Eastern Mediterranean
2.5 New Attitudes towards the Written
2.5.1 New Attitudes and Archives
2.5.2 Legal Reform and the Written
2.5.3 Judicializing the Written, Writing Judicially, and Handling Orality
Chapter 3 ‘Men Like the Franks’: Dealing with Diversity in Medieval Norms and Courts
3.1 An Introduction to Siyāsa
3.2 The Crusader Marketplace
3.2.1 Muslims and Crusader Courts
3.2.2 Jurors and Witnesses
3.2.3 Courts and Bans
3.2.4 Writing Down Transactions
3.2.5 Crusader Cyprus
3.3 The actor sequitur forum rei Principle
3.4 Empowering One Consul over the Others
3.5 An Iberian Epilogue
3.6 Siyāsa Justice in Theory and Practice
3.6.1 Persians in Cairo, Franks in Acre
3.7 Conflict Resolution in and out of the Courtroom
3.8 Merchants at the Islamic Courts: a Lender of Last Resort?
3.9 Mixed Cases at the Qadi Court
3.10 Mixed Cases before Siyāsa Courts
3.11 Siyāsa among the Franks
Chapter 4 Ottoman Legal Attitudes towards Diversity
4.0 The ‘Witness System’: a Bronze Wall?
4.0.1 The Early Ottoman Adjudication System
4.1 The Legal Grounds of the Ottoman Witness System
4.1.1 Vector One: the ‘Ḥanafī Exception’
4.1.2 Vector Two: Mustāʾmins Cannot Testify
4.1.3 Foreign Unbelievers: Between Mistrust and Accommodation
4.2 The Ban on Muslim Witnesses
4.3 Dhimmī Claims on Communal Exclusivity: the Carazari Clause
4.4 False Witnessing
4.5 Proving Enslavement
4.6 Legal Truth and the Governance of Frontier Zones
4.7 The Aleppo Ferman
4.8 A Death in Damascus
4.8.1 The Priuli Case in Court
Chapter 5 Conclusions
Bibliography
a) Manuscripts
b) Arabic and Islamic Sources
c) Latin and Christian Sources
d) Works Cited
Index