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Hardback

The Turks and the Caliphal Army

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A defense of Abbasid military policy from a powerhouse of Arabic letters

In the aftermath of a bitter civil war in 3rd/9th-century Baghdad, the Abbasid caliph al-Mu?ta?im began purchasing Turkish slaves to create a highly trained private militia loyal only to him. In doing so, al-Mu?ta?im introduced an enduring tradition of enslaved soldiers that became widespread across the region. The incorporation of these Turkish troops into the caliph's army, however, threatened to throw fuel on the fires of factional strife. With this text, written at the request of a high-ranking official, the legendary polymath and "father of Arabic prose" al-Ja?i? defends the Turkish soldiers' effectiveness and importance, and in so doing defends the unity and integrity of the army and the value of allegiance to the Abbasid state.

Using the epistolary essay as a rhetorical device, al-Ja?i? conceives a debate between his patron, al-Fat? ibn Khaqan, and an adversary. With al-Fat? as a mouthpiece, al-Ja?i? skillfully contrasts his own reasoned argument for harmony and understanding with his adversary's impassioned partisan polemics. While extolling the Turks' merits as soldiers, al-Ja?i? draws attention to the common ground between Turks and their rivals-history, geography, religion, and above all devotion to the Abbasid cause, stressing unity and reconciliation over discord and division. The result is a remarkable essay offering insight into social and political cohesion in the Abbasid empire at its height, and the rifts that threatened its stability.

A bilingual Arabic-English edition.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
New York University Press
Country
United States
Date
4 November 2025
Pages
184
ISBN
9781479840625

A defense of Abbasid military policy from a powerhouse of Arabic letters

In the aftermath of a bitter civil war in 3rd/9th-century Baghdad, the Abbasid caliph al-Mu?ta?im began purchasing Turkish slaves to create a highly trained private militia loyal only to him. In doing so, al-Mu?ta?im introduced an enduring tradition of enslaved soldiers that became widespread across the region. The incorporation of these Turkish troops into the caliph's army, however, threatened to throw fuel on the fires of factional strife. With this text, written at the request of a high-ranking official, the legendary polymath and "father of Arabic prose" al-Ja?i? defends the Turkish soldiers' effectiveness and importance, and in so doing defends the unity and integrity of the army and the value of allegiance to the Abbasid state.

Using the epistolary essay as a rhetorical device, al-Ja?i? conceives a debate between his patron, al-Fat? ibn Khaqan, and an adversary. With al-Fat? as a mouthpiece, al-Ja?i? skillfully contrasts his own reasoned argument for harmony and understanding with his adversary's impassioned partisan polemics. While extolling the Turks' merits as soldiers, al-Ja?i? draws attention to the common ground between Turks and their rivals-history, geography, religion, and above all devotion to the Abbasid cause, stressing unity and reconciliation over discord and division. The result is a remarkable essay offering insight into social and political cohesion in the Abbasid empire at its height, and the rifts that threatened its stability.

A bilingual Arabic-English edition.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
New York University Press
Country
United States
Date
4 November 2025
Pages
184
ISBN
9781479840625