The Formation of Islamic Law

The Formation of Islamic Law
Title The Formation of Islamic Law PDF eBook
Author Wael B. Hallaq
Publisher Routledge
Pages 458
Release 2016-12-05
Genre History
ISBN 1351889540

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The fourteen studies included in this volume have been chosen to serve several purposes simultaneously. At a basic level, they aim to provide a general - if not wholly systematic - coverage of the emergence and evolution of law during the first three and a half centuries of Islam. On another level, they reflect the different and, at times, widely divergent scholarly approaches to this subject matter. These two levels combined will offer a useful account of the rise of Islamic law not only for students in this field but also for Islamicists who are not specialists in matters of law, comparative legal historians, and others. At the same time, however, and as the Introduction to the work argues, this collection of distinguished contributions illustrates both the achievements and the shortcomings of paradigmatic scholarship on the formative period of Islamic law.

History of Islamic Law

History of Islamic Law
Title History of Islamic Law PDF eBook
Author Noel Coulson
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Pages 280
Release 2014-03-11
Genre Law
ISBN 0748696490

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The classic introduction to Islamic law, tracing its development from its origins,through the medieval period, to its place in modern Islam.

The Spirit of Islamic Law

The Spirit of Islamic Law
Title The Spirit of Islamic Law PDF eBook
Author Bernard G. Weiss
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Pages 233
Release 2006
Genre Law
ISBN 0820328278

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Focuses on a Muslim legal science known in Arabic as usul al-fiqh. Whereas the kindred science of fiqh is concerned with the articulation of actual rules of law, this science attempts to elaborate the theoretical and methodological foundations of the law. It outlines the features of Muslim juristic thought.

A History of Islamic Law

A History of Islamic Law
Title A History of Islamic Law PDF eBook
Author N. Coulson
Publisher Routledge
Pages 274
Release 2017-07-12
Genre Religion
ISBN 1351535293

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Lawyers, according to Edmund Burke, are bad historians. He was referring to an unwillingness, rather than an inaptitude, on the part of early nineteenth-century English lawyers to concern themselves with the past: for contemporary jurisprudence was a pure and isolated science wherein law appeared as a body of rules, based upon objective criteria, whose nature and very existence were independent of considerations of time and place. Despite the influence of the historical school of Western jurisprudence, Burke's observation is generally valid for Middle East studies. Muslim jurisprudence in its traditional form provides an extreme example of a legal science divorced from historical considerations. Law, in classical Islamic theory, is the revealed will of God, a divinely ordained system preceding, and not preceded by, the Muslim state controlling, but not controlled by, Muslim society. There can thus be no relativistic notion of the law itself evolving as an historical phenomenon closely tied with the progress of society. The increasing number of nations that are largely Muslim or have a Muslim head of state, emphasizes the growing political importance of the Islamic world, and, as a result, the desirability of extending and expanding the understanding and appreciation of their culture and belief systems. Since history counts for much among Muslims and what happened in 632 or 656 is still a live issue, a journalistic familiarity with present conditions is not enough; there must also be some awareness of how the past has molded the present. This book is designed to give the reader a clear picture. But where there are gaps, obscurities, and differences of opinion, these are also indicated.

The Formation of the Sunni Schools of Law

The Formation of the Sunni Schools of Law
Title The Formation of the Sunni Schools of Law PDF eBook
Author Christopher Melchert
Publisher BRILL
Pages 282
Release 1997
Genre Religion
ISBN 9789004109520

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Melchert traces the emergence of jurisprudence by h ad th, the personalization of the old regional schools in response, and finally the emergence of the classical, guild schools, with regular means of forming students, in the early tenth century.

The Second Formation of Islamic Law

The Second Formation of Islamic Law
Title The Second Formation of Islamic Law PDF eBook
Author Guy Burak
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 293
Release 2015-01-12
Genre History
ISBN 110709027X

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The Second Formation of Islamic Law offers a new periodization of Islamic legal history in the eastern Islamic lands.

The Formation of Islamic Hermeneutics

The Formation of Islamic Hermeneutics
Title The Formation of Islamic Hermeneutics PDF eBook
Author David R. Vishanoff
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2011
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780940490314

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This book is the first historical analysis of those parts of Islamic legal theory that deal with the language of revelation, and a milestone in reconstructing the missing history of legal theory in the ninth and tenth centuries. It offers a fresh interpretation of al-Shafii's seminal thought, and traces the development of four different responses to his hermeneutic, culminating in the works of Ibn Hazm, Abd al-Jabbar, al-Baqillani, and Abu Yala Ibn al-Farra. It reveals startling connections between rationalism and literalism, and documents how the remarkable diversity that characterized even traditionalist schools of law was eclipsed in the fifth/eleventh century by a pragmatic hermeneutic that gave jurists the interpretive power and flexibility they needed to claim revealed status for their legal doctrines. More than a detailed and richly documented history, this book opens new avenues for the comparative study of legal and hermeneutical theories, and offers new insights into unstated premises that shape and restrict Muslim legal discourse today. The book is of interest to all occupied with classical Islam, the development of Islamic law, and comparative hermeneutical research.