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The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History

IBN KHALDŪN (b. 27 May 1332 – d. 17 March 1406) was an Arab historiographer and historian. He is widely considered as a forerunner of the modern disciplines of historiography, sociology, economics, and demography.

Translated and introduced by FRANZ ROSENTHAL

Princeton University Press (Abridged Edition, 2015)
xxxvii + 512 pages including Index

RM145.00

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ISBN: 9780691166285 Product ID: 5062 Subjects: , Sub-subjects: , ,

The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History, often translated as “Introduction” or “Prolegomenon,” is the most important Islamic history of the premodern world. Written by the great fourteenth-century Arab scholar Ibn Khaldūn (d. 1406), this monumental work established the foundations of several fields of knowledge, including the philosophy of history, sociology, ethnography, and economics. The first complete English translation, by the eminent Islamicist and interpreter of Arabic literature Franz Rosenthal, was published in three volumes in 1958 as part of the Bollingen Series and received immediate acclaim in the United States and abroad. A one-volume abridged version of Rosenthal’s masterful translation first appeared in 1969. Ibn Khaldūn (1332-1406), as is well known, is one of the greatest Arab scholars and thinkers, not because of his monumental history of the Arabs, non-Arabs, and Berbers and their contemporaries up to his own time, but because of the prolegomenon or introduction, The Muqaddimah, which he wrote to this history. The great British historian and philosopher of history, Arnold J. Toynbee (1889-1975), called The Muqaddimah “undoubtedly the greatest work of its kind that has ever been created by any mind in any time or place… the most comprehensive and illuminating analysis of how human affairs work that has been made anywhere.”

Rosenthal’s masterful three-volume translation received wide acclaim in the world of scholarship, as did Dawood’s one-volume abridgment. By adding important sections of Rosenthal’s introduction and a new introduction by Lawrence to his succinct and deftly edited abridgment in this new reprint, Dawood has rendered an important service to students of Islam and medieval history. He could have provided an even more important service had the author included Rosenthal’s bibliography, or even the key sections of it, and enlarged the book’s index to be more comprehensive.

As for Professor Lawrence’s introduction, the only new part of this reprint, it puts Ibn Khaldūn’s The Muqaddimah within more recent scholarship on it, and shows what a continuously engaging work it still continues to be. He edited a useful work entitled Ibn Khaldūn and Islamic Ideology (Brill, 1984) and has written other contributions on the subject; he is thus a most knowledgeable scholar to introduce new readers of the 21st century to Ibn Khaldūn. Lawrence’s way of connecting Ibn Khaldūn’s philosophy of history with the principles of Islamic jurisprudence, which he uses both as a science and a pedagogical tool, is fascinating. He shows, for example, how the principle of ‘ijma (consensus) in the theory of Islamic law functions as ‘asabiyya (group feeling) does in society by mustering a collective will. Furthermore, he cuts through the often bewildering detailed arguments of Ibn Khaldūn in The Muqaddimah to show how his organizational vision considers human civilization moving from manual, physical labor to refined, intellectual pursuits; from desert to sedentary dimensions; from statecraft associated with tribal or religious affiliations to centralized rule, then asymmetric empire; from an almost natural and strong ‘asabiyya that unites society to an effete weakness that invites another civilization to take over.

Dawood’s abridgment of Rosenthal’s translation, now with Lawrence’s introduction, is a good addition to the available works on Islamic history and thought, and makes Ibn Khaldūn’s philosophy of history more easily accessible and understandable.

Introduction to the 2005 Edition
From the Translator’s Introduction to the 1958 Unabridged Edition
Introduction by N. J. Dawood
Invocation
Foreword

THE INTRODUCTION
The excellence of historiography. An appreciation of the various approaches to history. A glimpse of the different kinds of errors to which historians are liable. Why these errors occur

BOOK ONE OF THE KITAB AL-‘IBAR
The nature of civilization. Bedouin and settled life, the achievements of superiority, gainful occupations, ways of making a living, sciences, crafts, and all the other things that affect civilization. The causes and reasons thereof

CHAPTER 1 – Human civilization in general
FIRST PREFATORY DISCUSSION

SECOND PREFATORY DISCUSSION
The parts of the earth where civilization is found. Some information about oceans, rivers, and zones

THIRD PREFATORY DISCUSSION
The temperate and the intemperate zones. The influence of the air upon the colour of human beings and upon many other aspects of their condition

FOURTH PREFATORY DISCUSSION
The influence of climate upon human character

FIFTH PREFATORY DISCUSSION
Differences with regard to abundance and scarcity of food in the various inhabited regions and how they affect the human body and character

SIXTH PREFATORY DISCUSSION
The various types of human beings who have supernatural perception either through natural disposition or through exercise, preceded by a discussion of inspiration and dream visions

CHAPTER 2 – Bedouin civilization, savage nations and tribes and their conditions of life, including several basic and explanatory Statements

CHAPTER 3 – On dynasties, royal authority, the caliphate, government ranks, and all that goes with these things. The chapter contains basic and supplementary propositions

CHAPTER 4 – Countries and cities, and all other forms of sedentary civilization. The conditions occurring there. Primary and secondar considerations in this connection

CHAPTER 5 – On the various aspects of making a living, such as profit and the crafts. The conditions that occur in this connection. A number of problems are connected with this subject

CHAPTER 6 – The various kinds of sciences. The methods of instruction. The conditions that obtain in these conditions

PREFATORY DISCUSSION
On man’s ability to think, which distinguishes human beings from animals and which enables them to obtain their livelihood, to co-operate to this end with their fellow men, and to study the Master whom they worship, and the revelations that the Messengers transmitted from Him. God thus caused all animals to obey man and to be in the grasp of his power. Through his ability to think, God gave man superiority over many of His creatures

Concluding Remark
Index

Weight0.519 kg
Dimensions22.5 × 13.8 × 2.5 cm
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