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Caroline Stone*
Table of contents
1. Introductory note by the editors of
Saudi Aramco World
2. His Life
3. His Work
4. The Exhibition Ibn
Khaldun: The Mediterranean in the 14th Century: The Rise and Fall of
Empires
Note of the editor
This article
appeared in Saudi Aramco World, vol. 57, issue 5,
September/October 2006, pp. 28-39. For the online version, with
figures, see: Caroline Stone:
Ibn Khaldun and the Rise and Fall of Empires
(© Saudi Aramco World). We reproduce the article under the
permission granted by the publisher (see
Copyright and Permissions). The
figures and captions illustrating the articles were added by the
editorial board of
www.MuslimHeritage.com.
* * *
1. Introductory note by the editors of
Saudi Aramco World
Abu Zayd ‘Abd al-Rahman
ibn Muhammad ibn Khaldun al-Hadhrami, 14th-century Arab
historiographer and historian, was a brilliant scholar and thinker
now viewed as a founder of modern historiography, sociology and
economics. Living in one of human kind's most turbulent centuries,
he observed at first hand—or even participated in—such decisive
events as the birth of new states, the death throes of al-Andalus
and the advance of the Christian reconquest, the Hundred Years' War,
the expansion of the Ottoman Empire, the decline of Byzantium and
the great epidemic of the Black Death. Albert Hourani described Ibn
Khaldun's world as "full of reminders of the fragility of human
effort"; out of his experiences, Arnold Toynbee wrote, "he conceived
and created a philosophy of history that was undoubtedly the
greatest work ever created by a man of intelligence." So
groundbreaking were his ideas, and so far ahead of his time, that a
major exhibition [1] now takes his
writings as a lens through which to view not only his own time but
the relations between Europe and the Arab world in our own time as
well.
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Figure
1:
A modern statue of Ibn Khaldun stands in the center of
Tunis, his native city, on the Habib Bourguiba Avenue.
Photography taken in July 2007. (Source). |
2. His Life
Ibn Khaldun's
ancestors were from the Hadhramawt, now southeastern Yemen, and he
relates that, in the eighth century, one Khaldun ibn ‘Uthman was
with the Yemeni divisions that helped the Muslims colonize the
Iberian Peninsula. Khaldun ibn ‘Uthman settled first at Carmona and
then in Seville, where several of the family had distinguished
careers as scholars and officials.
During the
Christian reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula, the family emigrated
to North Africa, probably about 1248, eventually settling in Tunis.
There Ibn Khaldun was born on May 7, 1332. He received an excellent
classical education, but when he was 17, the plague, or Black Death,
reached the city. His parents and several of his teachers died. The
terrible epidemic that struck the Middle East, North Africa and
Europe in 1347–1348, killing at least one-third of the population,
had a traumatic effect on the survivors. Its impact showed in every
aspect of life: art, literature, social structures and intellectual
life. It was clearly one of the experiences that shaped Ibn
Khaldun's perception of the world.
Tunis was not only
ravaged by the Black Death, but had also been reduced to political
chaos by its occupation between 1340 and 1350 by the Marinids, the
Berber dynasty that ruled Morocco. At 20, Ibn Khaldun set out for
Fez, the Marinid capital, the liveliest court in North Africa. On
the strength of his education, he was offered a secretarial
position, but left before long. Although some historians regard his
departure as disloyal, it is more likely he was fleeing the general
political disintegration.
This was to be a
pattern in Ibn Khaldun's life. He was constantly tempted to become
involved in murky political intrigues which, combined with the
extreme instability of most of the ruling dynasties, meant that he
had little choice but frequent changes of master. These experiences,
like those of the Black Death, were instrumental in shaping his
outlook.
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Figure
2:
Miniature "Victimes de la peste de 1349" (victims of
1349-plague) in the Annales of Gilles le Muisit
(1272-1353). The Great Plague, or Black Death, swept
from Central Asia to Europe, killing an estimated
one-third of the population wherever it spread. It
reached Tunis in 1348 when Ibn Khaldun was 17; its
victims included his parents and several of his
teachers. These losses, together with the ensuing social
and economic chaos, deeply affected him. © Royal Library
of Belgium. (Source). |
After a number of
moves, he found himself back in Fez, where the previous Marinid
ruler had been supplanted by his son, Abu ‘Inan, to whom Ibn Khaldun
offered his services. Soon, however, he was once again caught up in
political turmoil, and after many changes of fortune, including two
years in prison, he decided to withdraw to Granada in 1362. The
roots of this decision went back several years.
In 1359, the ruler
of Granada, Muhammad ibn al-Ahmar, had been forced to flee to Fez
together with his vizier, Ibn al-Khatib, one of the most famous
scholars of the age. There they had met Ibn Khaldun. A warm
friendship had developed, so that when, in turn, Ibn Khaldun had to
escape from similarly dangerous politics, he was received in Granada
with honors. Two years later, in 1364, Ibn Khaldun was sent by Ibn
al-Ahmar to Seville on a peace mission to King Pedro I of Castile,
known as "Pedro the Cruel." In his Autobiography (Ta‘rif),
Ibn Khaldun describes how Pedro offered to return his family estates
and properties to him, and how he refused the offer. This contact
with a Christian power was another watershed experience. He
reflected not only on his own family's past, but also on the
changing fate of kingdoms—and above all on the historical and
theological implications of the reassertion of Christian power in
Iberia after more than five centuries of Muslim hegemony.
Later, personal
clashes with Ibn al-Khatib, probably fueled by a mixture of jealousy
and court intrigue, drove Ibn Khaldun back to the turmoils of North
Africa. He had repeatedly expressed the wish to devote his life to
scholarship, but the political world clearly fascinated him. Over
and over he succumbed to its temptations; in any case, so well-known
a figure was unlikely to be left in peace to study.
In spite of their
differences, Ibn Khaldun continued to correspond with Ibn al-Khatib,
and several of these letters are cited in his Autobiography.
He also tried to save his friend when, largely as a result of court
intrigue, Ibn al-Khatib was brought to trial, accused of heresy for
contradicting the ‘ulama, the religious authorities, by
insisting that the plague was a communicable disease. His situation
can be compared with that of Galileo nearly three centuries later,
but with a less happy outcome: Ibn al-Khatib was strangled in prison
at Fez in the late spring of 1375.
Ibn Khaldun was
much affected by his friend's death, not only personally, but also
because of the political and religious implications of such an
execution. Not long afterward, he withdrew to the Castle of Ibn
Salamah, not far from Oran in Algeria. There, for the first time, he
could really dedicate himself to study and reflect on what he had
learned from books, as well as on his often bitter experience of the
violent and turbulent world of his day.
The fruit of this
period of calm was the Muqaddimah or Introduction to his
Kitab al-‘Ibar (The Book of Admonitions or Book of Precepts,
also often referred to as the Universal History.) Although
these are really one work, they are often considered separately, for
the Muqaddimah contains Ibn Khaldun's most original and
controversial perceptions, while the Kitab al-‘Ibar is a
conventional narrative history. Ibn Khaldun continued to rewrite and
revise his great work in the light of new information or experience
for the rest of his life.
He spent the years
from 1375 to 1379 at the Castle of Ibn Salamah, but at last felt the
need for intellectual companionship—and for proper libraries in
which to continue his research. At the age of 47, Ibn Khaldun
returned again to Tunis, where "my ancestors lived and where there
still exist their houses, their remains and their tombs." He planned
to travel no more and to settle down as a teacher and scholar,
eschewing all political involvement.
That was not so
easy. Some considered his rationalist teachings subversive, and the
imam of al-Zaytunah Mosque in Tunis, with whom he had been on terms
of rivalry since his student days, became jealous. To make matters
yet more difficult, the sultan insisted that Ibn Khaldun remain in
Tunis and complete his book there, since a ruler's status was
greatly enhanced by attracting learned men to his court.
The situation
finally became so tense and so difficult that in 1382 Ibn Khaldun
asked permission to leave to perform the hajj, the pilgrimage
to Makkah—the one reason for withdrawal that could never be denied
in the Islamic world. In October he set out for Egypt. He was
immensely impressed by Cairo, which exceeded all his expectations.
There, the Mamluk sultan Barquq received him with enthusiasm and
gave him the important position of qadi, or justice, of the
Maliki school of Islamic law.
This, however,
proved to be no sinecure. In his Autobiography, Ibn Khaldun
describes how his efforts to combat corruption and ignorance,
together with the jealousy aroused by the appointment of a foreigner
to a top job, meant that once again he found himself in a hornets'
nest. It was something of a relief when the sultan dismissed him in
favor of the former qadi. In fact, before the end of his
life, Ibn Khaldun was to be appointed and dismissed no fewer than
six times.
Ibn Khaldun was
married and had children; he had a sister who died young—her
tombstone survives—and his brother Yahya ibn Khaldun was also a very
distinguished historian. However, we know very little about his
personal life. It was not the Muslim, and in particular not the
Arab, custom to include personal details in one's writings. We do
know, however, that at about this time, Ibn Khaldun's family and
household, which was essentially being held hostage at Tunis for his
return, were given permission to join him in Cairo. This was at the
personal request of Barquq, whose letter is quoted in the
Autobiography. But the boat carrying his family went down in a
tempest off Alexandria, and no one survived.
Three years
passed. Ibn Khaldun dedicated himself to teaching and then at last
set out to perform the hajj in 1387 with the Egyptian
caravan. Ibn Khaldun says little of his pilgrimage, but he mentions
that at Yanbu‘ he received a letter from his old friend Ibn Zamrak,
many of whose poems are inscribed on interior walls of the Alhambra.
Ibn Zamrak, then the confidential secretary of the ruler of Granada,
asked among other things for books from Egypt. It is one more
example of how Ibn Khaldun maintained his intellectual contacts all
across the Arabic-speaking world.
On his return to
Cairo, Ibn Khaldun held various teaching posts, but from 1399 the
cycle of political appointments and dismissals began again. The
scholar had already witnessed at first hand the political upheavals
caused by the various Berber dynasties in North Africa, as well as
the success of the Christian powers in reducing the Muslim kingdoms
in the Iberian Peninsula. Now he was about to witness another
example of the rise and fall of empires, this time with an epicenter
farther to the east than he had ever traveled.
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Figure
3:
Astrolabic quadrant made by Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Mizzi
the the muwaqqit (time-keeper) of the Great
Mosque of Damascus in 1333-34 CE. There are four other
astrolabic quadrants signed by the same craftsman, and
they are the earliest known examples of this type of
quadrant. (Source). |
In 1400, Ibn
Khaldun was compelled by Barquq's successor, Sultan al-Nasir, to
travel to Damascus, where he took part in the negotiations with the
Central Asian conqueror Timur, the Turco-Mongol ruler known in the
West as Tamerlane. The aim was to persuade Timur to spare Damascus.
Ibn Khaldun describes his conversations with Timur in some of the
most interesting pages of his Autobiography.
In the end,
however, the Egyptian diplomatic delegation was unsuccessful. Timur
did sack Damascus and from there went on to take Baghdad, with great
loss of life. The following year, Timur defeated the Ottomans at
Ankara, taking their Sultan Beyazit prisoner. These events are
described by the Spanish traveler Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo, who went
out to Samarkand in 1403 as ambassador to Timur.
Ibn Khaldun's
Autobiography continues for no more than a page or two after his
return from Damascus, and he mentions only his appointments and
dismissals. Although he never returned to Tunis, he continued to
think of himself as a westerner, wearing until the last the dark
burnous that is still the national dress of North Africa. He
continued to revise and correct his great work until his death in
Cairo on March 16, 1406—600 years ago this past spring.
3. His Work
Ibn Khaldun's most
important work was Kitab al-‘Ibar, and of that the most
significant section was the Muqaddimah. Such "introductions"
were a recognized literary form at the time, and it is thus not
surprising that the Muqaddimah is both long—three volumes in
the standard translation—and the repository of its author's most
original thoughts. Kitab al-‘Ibar, which follows, is much
more conventional in both content and organization, although it is
one of the most important surviving sources for the history of
medieval North Africa, the Berbers and, to a lesser extent, Muslim
Spain.
In the early 19th
century, western scholars, already admirers of such Muslim thinkers
as the philosopher Ibn Rushd, whom they knew as Averroes, became
aware of the Muqaddimah, probably through the Ottoman Turks.
They were struck by its originality—all the more so because it was
written at a time when political and religious authority were
exerting increasing pressure against independent thought, resulting
in a decline of original scholarship. In this context, Ibn Khaldun's
interest in a whole range of subjects that today would be classified
as sociology and economic theory, and his wish to create a new
discipline to accommodate them, came as a particular surprise to
scholars in both the Arab world and the West.
Many of the
subjects that Ibn Khaldun discusses are not, however, new
preoccupations. They had also concerned both Greek thinkers and
earlier Arab writers, such as al-Farabi and Mas‘udi, to whom Ibn
Khaldun refers frequently. The question of how much access Ibn
Khaldun had to Greek sources in translation is still being debated,
and in particular whether he had read Plato's Republic. But
Ibn Khaldun's originality lies not in the fact he was conscious of
these problems, but in his awareness of the complexity of their
interrelationships and the need to study social cause and effect in
a rigorous way.
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Figure
4:
One of the many beautiful patios of the Alcazar palace
in Seville showing the delicately carved arches of the
Patio del Yeso (Patio of the Stuccoes). In 1364, Ibn
Khaldun journeyed to Seville, seat of the Castillan
monarch Pedro I, whose magnificent Real Alcázar ("Royal
Palace"), inspired from Mudejar art, was then close to
completion. (Source).
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It is in this way
that Ibn Khaldun took his place in a chain of intellectual
development. Although his work was not followed up by succeeding
generations, and indeed met with some disapproval and even censure,
the great Egyptian historian al-Maqrizi perhaps chose his career as
a result of his acquaintance with Ibn Khaldun, and he developed some
of Ibn Khaldun's ideas. It was, however, the Ottoman Turks who took
the most interest in his theories concerning the rise and fall of
empires, since many of the points he discusses appeared to apply to
their own political situation.
In the
Muqaddimah, Ibn Khaldun's central theme is why nations rise to
power and what causes their decline. He divides his argument into
six sections or fields. At the beginning, he considers both source
material and methodology; he analyzes the problems of writing
history and notes the fallacies which most frequently lead
historians astray. His comments are still relevant today.
Another aspect of
Ibn Khaldun's originality is his stress on studying the realities of
human society and attempting to draw conclusions based on
observation, rather than trying to reconcile observation with
preconceived ideas. It is interesting that at the time Ibn Khaldun
was writing, the humanist movement was well under way in Europe, and
it shared many of the same preoccupations as Ibn Khaldun, in
particular the great importance of the interaction between people
and their physical and social environment.
One of Ibn
Khaldun's basic subjects is still being debated, and it is of the
greatest relevance in the increasingly multicultural societies of
today: What is social solidarity, and how does a society achieve it
and maintain it? He argues that no society can achieve
anything—conquer an empire or even survive—unless there is internal
consensus about its aims. He does not argue in favor of democracy in
any recognizable form (which suggests he may not have had intimate
knowledge of the Greek political theorists), and he assumes the need
for strong leadership, but it is clear that, to him, a successful
society as a whole must be in agreement as to its ultimate goals.
He points out that
solidarity—he uses the word ‘asabiyah—is strongest in tribal
societies because they are based on blood kinship and because,
without solidarity, survival in a harsh environment is impossible.
If this solidarity is joined to the other most powerful social bond,
religion, then the combination tends to be irresistible.
Ibn Khaldun
perceives history as a cycle in which rough, nomadic peoples, with
high degrees of internal bonding and little material culture to
lose, invade and take resources from sedentary and essentially urban
civilizations. These urban civilizations have high levels of wealth
and culture but are self-indulgent and lack both "martial spirit"
and the concomitant social solidarity. This is because those
qualities have become unnecessary for survival in an urban
environment, and also because it is almost impossible for the large
number of different groups that compose a multicultural city to
attain the same level of solidarity as a tribe linked by blood,
shared custom and survival experiences. Thus the nomads conquer the
cities and go on to be seduced by the pleasures of civilization and
in their turn lose their solidarity and come under attack by the
next group of rough and vigorous outsiders—and the cycle begins
again.
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Figure
5a-b:
Two posters from the exhibition Encounter of
Civilizations: Ibn Khaldun displayed at the United
Nations Headquarters in New York (18th December 2006-17
January 2007). (Source). |
Ibn Khaldun's
reflections derive, of course, from his experiences in a radically
unstable time. He had seen Arab civilization overrun in some parts
of the world and seriously undermined in others: in North Africa by
the Berbers, in Spain by the Franks and in the heartlands of the
caliphate by Timur and his Turco-Mongol hordes. He was well aware
that the Arab empire had been founded by Bedouin who were, in terms
of material culture, much less sophisticated than the peoples of the
lands they conquered, but whose ‘asabiyah was far more
powerful and who were inspired by the new faith of Islam. He was
deeply saddened to watch what he saw as a cycle of conquest, decay
and reconquest repeated at the expense of his own civilization.
As Ibn Khaldun
developed his themes through the Muqaddimah, he presented
many other innovative theories relating to education, economics,
taxation, the role of the city versus the country, the bureaucracy
versus the military and what influences affect the development of
both individuals and cultures. It is in these themes that we find
echoes of al-Mas‘udi's Kitab al-Tanbih wa al-Ishraf, where he
considers the factors that shape a nation's laws: the nature of
authority and the relationship between spiritual and temporal
powers, to name only two.
It is worth
remembering that, besides having witnessed a particularly turbulent
period of history, Ibn Khaldun also had much practical experience of
politics on both national and international levels. Furthermore, his
various terms of duty as a qadi in Cairo gave him, as he
claimed, insight into the problems of battling corruption and
ignorance in a cosmopolitan environment, mindful of the "moral
decadence" he believed to be one of the great threats to
civilization. His conclusions were, as he tells us in his
Autobiography, based on practical knowledge and direct
observation, as well as academic theory.
It would be hard
for any book to live up to the standard set by the Muqaddimah,
and indeed Kitab al-‘Ibar does not. Although it is an
invaluable source for the history of the Muslim West, it is less
remarkable in other fields, and Ibn Khaldun did not share al-Mas‘udi's
lively and unbiased interest in the non-Muslim world. Other blank
spots are all the more surprising in that Ibn Khaldun was living in
Cairo with access to excellent libraries and bookshops.
On the other hand,
there were occasions when he made great efforts to establish facts
accurately. It must have required courage to ask Timur himself to
correct the passages in the ‘Ibar that referred to him! Timur
was of great interest to Ibn Khaldun, who hoped the conqueror might
be the one to provide the social solidarity needed for a renaissance
of the Muslim and, especially, the Arab worlds—but it was a short-
lived hope.
Ibn Khaldun wrote
a number of other books on purely academic subjects, as well as
early works which have vanished. His Autobiography, although
lacking personal details, contains extremely interesting information
about the world in which he lived and, of course, about his meetings
with Pedro and Timur.
Ibn Khaldun's
strength was thus not as a historian in the traditional sense of a
compiler of chronicles. He was the creator of a new discipline,
‘umran, or social science, which treated human civilization and
social facts as an interconnected whole and would help to change the
way history was perceived, as well as written.
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Figure
6:
Two coins issued in 1382 during Antonio Venier reign as
Doge of the Venetian Republic from 1382 to 1400. Antonio
Venier was responsible for reviving Venice's economy
after the Black Death and negotiating with the Mamluks
to make the city Egypt's most important trading partner.
At this period, Ibn Khaldun was resident in Cairo. The
statue is displayed in the Real Alcázar's Hall of the
Ambassadors, where Ibn Khaldun may have been received by
Pedro I. (Source). |
4. The Exhibition Ibn Khaldun: The Mediterranean in
the 14th Century: The Rise and Fall of Empires
The exhibition
marking the 600th anniversary of the death of Ibn Khaldun could not
be held in a more evocative place than Seville's Real Alcázar (Royal
Palace). Not only is it a most beautiful backdrop, but it is a
building that Ibn Khaldun himself knew. He walked through the same
rooms where the exhibition is being held today, and he stood in the
great Audience Chamber when he met Pedro I "The Cruel" on his peace
mission from the sultan of Granada in 1364.
That is, of
course, if the rooms were complete, for in 1364 the palace was
partly under construction by the Christian king "in the Moorish
manner," decorated with Arabic calligraphy by Muslim craftsmen in
the style called mudejar. For Ibn Khaldun it must have been a
strange experience to revisit the city where his ancestors had held
high office and to walk through older areas of the palace, such as
the Patio del Yeso (Patio of the Stuccoes), which they would have
known.
Opened by King
Juan Carlos and Queen Sofía of Spain and attended by royalty and
dignitaries from many countries, the commemorative exhibition is
dedicated to the world of Ibn Khaldun, placing him in the context of
his age and doing much to explain his particular preoccupation with
the rise and fall of empires.
Apart from
manuscripts, some in his own hand, and his sister's tombstone,
little survives that is directly connected with Ibn Khaldun,
although the writings of his friend Ibn al-Khatib are represented.
Nevertheless, from around all the Mediterranean, a dozen or more
countries have contributed items to build up the picture of the
material world he would have known: plates such as those he might
have used, mosque lamps, a traveler's writing box, a set of nesting
glasses, some beautiful examples of Granada silk and more.
In one section of
his Autobiography, Ibn Khaldun wrote at length about the gifts he
arranged to be sent to certain rulers on various occasions. These
were an essential part of the diplomatic exchanges of the day, and
fine silks played an important role. He also described his hunt for
suitable presents to give Timur: He chose a one-volume copy of the
Qur'an with an iron clasp, a pretty prayer rug, a copy of a
famous poem (al-Burdah) and four boxes of his favorite
Egyptian sweets—which he tells us were immediately opened and handed
round. Similar items are on display.
The world of Ibn
Khaldun is also brought alive by photographs or architectural
details of buildings he would have known, from the street on which
he is believed to have lived in Tunis to the Castle of Ibn Salamah,
now in ruins, where he retired for four years of relative peace to
write his great work. The madrasahs, where he taught all across
North Africa and in Cairo, are represented too—including, of course,
al-Azhar, the great center of Islamic learning still functioning
today.
The Christian
world is also present to remind the visitor of what was going on in
Europe in terms of art and intellectual achievement during the
period Ibn Khaldun was writing. There are objects from China and
Central Asia too, for besides the struggles for power among the
Berber dynasties in North Africa and the Christian attempt to drive
the Muslim colonizers from Spain, the great threat to civilization
as Ibn Khaldun saw it was in fact posed by Timur. Hence the Central
Asian steppe was an important part of the world picture from which
his theories of the rise and fall of empires was formed. Taking
advantage of Seville's warm summer nights, the exhibition stays open
until midnight. This enables visitors to wander through the
courtyards of the palace, watch the moon reflect in the ornamental
pools and inhale the scent of jasmine—a plant introduced by the
Arabs and which Ibn Khaldun would have known.
In the evenings, a
play about Ibn Khaldun is performed in the gardens, and across the
façade of the palace there is a striking play of projected images:
knights in armor, Mamluk horsemen, depictions of Dante and Timur,
calligraphy in both Arabic and Latin, maps and landscapes taken from
illuminated manuscripts.
One of the most
remarkable achievements of this exhibition is its fine catalogue,
coordinated under the auspices of the Granada-based El Legado
Andalusí and the José Manuel Lara Foundations. It is in two volumes,
with one dedicated specifically to the exhibition and the other a
compilation of articles on aspects of Ibn Khaldun and his world
written by scholars from a wide range of universities. (Fittingly,
Ibn Khaldun's home city of Tunis is particularly well represented.)
It is, in fact, an anthology of the most up-to-date scholarship on
Ibn Khaldun and his world.
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Figure
7:
Map of the Muslim World around 1400, few years before
Ibn Khaldun's death. In the 15th and 16th centuries,
three major Muslim powers emerged: the Ottoman Empire in
much of the Middle East, the Balkans and Northern
Africa; the Safavid Empire in Greater Iran; and the
Mughul Empire in South Asia. These new imperial powers
were made possible by the discovery and exploitation of
gunpowder, and a more efficient administration. (Source).
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Particularly
interesting is the analysis of his manuscripts by Jumaâ Cheikha of
the University of Tunis, who shows that the oft-repeated statement
that Ibn Khaldun was not valued in the Muslim world is untrue: 195
surviving copies of his various books may not seem like much in the
light of modern print runs, but by medieval standards it indicated
success. Many works by more recent authors have come down to us in
not more than a single copy.
As an homage to
Ibn Khaldun, and one that would surely have given him pleasure, the
organizers and especially Jerónimo Páez López, founder of El Legado
Andalusí, have gone to immense trouble to ensure that places
associated with Ibn Khaldun are all represented and different
aspects of his world covered. It is very much to be hoped that the
plans for the exhibition to travel to a number of different
locations will come to fruition.
5. Appendixes
[2]
5.1. The Black
Death
"Civilization both
in the East and the West was visited by a destructive plague which
devastated nations and caused populations to vanish. It swallowed up
many of the good things of civilization and wiped them out. It
overtook the dynasties at the time of their senility, when they had
reached the limit of their duration. It lessened their power and
curtailed their influence. It weakened their authority. Their
situation approached the point of annihilation and dissolution.
Civilization decreased with the decrease of mankind. Cities and
buildings were laid waste, roads and way-signs were obliterated,
settlements and mansions became empty, dynasties and tribes grew
weak. The entire inhabited world changed. The East, it seems, was
similarly visited, though in accordance with and in proportion to
[the East's more affluent] civilization. It was as if the voice of
existence in the world had called out for oblivion and restriction,
and the world responded to its call"
(tr. Rosenthal).
5.2. The Contents
of the Muqaddimah
1. Human society,
its kinds and geographical distribution.
2. Nomadic societies, tribes and "savage peoples."
3. States, the spiritual and temporal powers, and political ranks.
4. Sedentary societies, cities and provinces.
5. Crafts, means of livelihood and economic activity.
6. Learning and the ways in which it is acquired.
5.3. The New
Science
"This science
then, like all other sciences, whether based on authority or on
reasoning, appears to be independent and has its own subject, viz.
human society, and its own problems, viz. the social phenomena and
the transformations that succeed each other in the nature of
society…. It seems to be a new science which has sprung up
spontaneously, for I do not recollect having read anything about it
by any previous writers. This may be because they did not grasp its
importance, which I doubt, or it may be that they studied the
subject exhaustively, but that their works were not transmitted to
us. For the sciences are numerous, and the thinkers belonging to the
different nations are many, and what has perished of the ancient
sciences exceeds by far what has reached us"
(tr. Issawi).
5.4. Overcrowding
and Urban Planning
"The commonest
cause of epidemics is the pollution of the air resulting from a
denser population which fills it with corruption and dense
moisture…. That is why we mentioned, elsewhere, the wisdom of
leaving open empty spaces in built-up areas, in order that the winds
may circulate, carrying away all the corruption produced in the air
by animals and bringing in its place fresh, clean air. And this is
why the death rate is highest in populous cities, such as Cairo in
the East and Fez in the West"
(tr. Issawi).
5.5. The
pernicious effects of domination
"A harsh and
violent upbringing, whether of pupils, slaves or servants, has as
its consequence that violence dominates the soul and prevents the
development of the personality. Energy gives way to indolence, and
wickedness, deceit, cunning and trickery are developed by fear of
physical violence. These tendencies soon become ingrained habits,
corrupting the human quality which men acquire through social
intercourse and which consists of manliness and the ability to
defend oneself and one's household. Such men become dependent on
others for protection; their souls even become too lazy to acquire
virtue or moral beauty. They become ingrown. …This is what has
happened to every nation which has been dominated by others and
harshly treated"
(tr. Issawi).
5.6. Taxes
"In the early
stages of the state, taxes are light in their incidence, but fetch
in a large revenue; in the later stages the incidence of taxation
increases while the aggregate revenue falls off. …Now where taxes
and imposts are light, private individuals are encouraged to
actively engage in business; enterprise develops, because
businessmen feel it worth their while, in view of the small share of
their profits which they have to give up in the form of taxation.
And as business prospers the number of taxes increases and the total
yield of taxation grows. However, governments become progressively
more extravagant and start to raise taxes. These increases [in taxes
and sales taxes] grow with the spread of luxurious habits in the
state, and the consequent growth in needs and public expenditure,
until taxation burdens the subjects and deprives them of their
gains. People get accustomed to this high level of taxation, because
the increases have come about gradually, without anyone's being
aware of exactly who it was who raised the rates of the old taxes or
imposed the new ones. But the effects on business of this rise in
taxation make themselves felt. For businessmen are soon discouraged
by the comparison of their profits with the burden of their taxes,
and between their output and their net profits. Consequently
production falls off, and with it the yield of taxation. The rulers
may, mistakenly, try to remedy this decrease in the yield of
taxation by raising the rate of taxes; hence taxes and imposts reach
a level which leaves no profit to businessmen, owing to high costs
of production, heavy burden of taxation and inadequate net profits.
This process of higher tax rates and lower yields (caused by the
government's belief that higher rates result in higher returns) may
go on until production begins to decline owing to the despair of
businessmen, and to affect the population. The main injury of this
process is felt by the state, just as the main benefit of better
business conditions is enjoyed by it. From this you must understand
that the most important factor making for business prosperity is to
lighten as much as possible the burden of taxation on businessmen,
in order to encourage enterprise by giving assurance of greater
profits"
(tr. Issawi).
5.7. At Qal‘at ibn
Salamah
"I had taken
refuge at Qal‘at ibn Salamah… and was staying in the castle
belonging to Abu Bakr ibn ‘Arif, a well-built and most welcoming
place. I had been there for a long time…working on the composition
of the Kitab al-‘Ibar to the exclusion of all else. I had already
finished drafting it, from the Introduction to the history of the
Arabs, Berbers and the Zanatah, when I felt the need to consult
books and archives such as are only to be found in large towns, in
order to check and correct the numerous citations that I had set
down from memory. Then I fell ill…. Because of all this, I felt a
great wish to be reconciled with the Sultan Abu al-‘Abbas and to go
back to Tunis, the land of my forefathers, whose houses and tombs
are still standing and where traces of them are still to be found"
(tr. Caroline Stone).
[1]
[The exhibition was held in the Real Alcázar de
Sevilla in May-September 2006: Ibn Jaldu´n: el Mediterráneo en el
siglo XIV. Auge y declive de los imperios [Ibn Khaldun: The
Mediterranean Region in the XIV century; the rise and fall of
empires] organised in (Sevilla by the Fundacio´n El Legado Andalusi´
and Fundacio´n Jose´ Manuel Lara [note added by
www.MuslimHeritage.com editorial
board].
[2]
These extracts from Ibn Khaldun's Muqaddima
are part of the article published in Saudi Aramco World. A note in
the article specifies: "Where not otherwise credited, translations
from the Muqaddimah are from Charles Issawi's An Arab
Philosophy of History: Selections from the Prolegomena of Ibn
Khaldun of Tunis (1332–1406) (revised edition 1987, Darwin
Press) or from Franz Rosenthal's three-volume translation The
Muqaddimah (second edition 1967, Princeton University) [note
added by
www.MuslimHeritage.com editorial
board].
* Caroline Stone
has published more than 150 articles over the years in various
languages, principally on textile history, medieval history and
literature, Islamic culture and literature, and the cultural and
economic relations between Europe and the Orient in the pre-modern
era. She is the author, with Paul Lunde, of Al-Mas'udi, The Meadows
of Gold: The Abbasids, translators and editors (Kegan Paul
International, 1989). For a list of her publications, click
here. [Note added by
www.MuslimHeritage.com editorial
board.]
by:
Caroline Stone |