The Mamluk city in the Middle East : history, culture, and the urban landscape

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Bibliographic Information

The Mamluk city in the Middle East : history, culture, and the urban landscape

Nimrod Luz

(Cambridge studies in Islamic civilization)

Cambridge University Press, 2015

  • : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

"First published 2014. First paperback edition 2015"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-257) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Mamluk City in the Middle East offers an interdisciplinary study of urban history, urban experience, and the nature of urbanism in the region under the rule of the Mamluk Sultanate (1250-1517). The book focuses on three less-explored but politically significant cities in the Syrian region - Jerusalem, Safad (now in Israel), and Tripoli (now in Lebanon) - and presents a new approach and methodology for understanding historical cities. Drawing on diverse textual sources and intensive field surveys, Nimrod Luz reveals the character of the Mamluk city as well as various aspects of urbanism in the region, establishing the pre-modern city of the Middle East as a valid and useful lens through which to study various themes such as architecture, art history, history, and politics of the built environment. As part of this approach, Luz considers the processes by which Mamluk discourses of urbanism were conceptualized and then inscribed in the urban environment as concrete expressions of architectural design, spatial planning, and public memorialization.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. Introduction: 1. Urban regional history before the Mamluks: presenting Tripoli, Safad, and Jerusalem
  • Part II. The Tangible City: 2. Reading the built environment: a field survey of Mamluk Jerusalem
  • 3. Houses and residential solutions in the cities of al-Sham
  • 4. The neighborhood: social and spatial expressions
  • Part III. The Socially Constructed City: 5. Awqaf and urban infrastructures
  • 6. Icons of power and expressions of religious piety: the politics of Mamluk patronage
  • Part IV. The Conceptualized City: 7. Cities scripted, envisioned, and perceived
  • 8. The public sphere - urban autonomy and its limitations.

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