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3 - Al-Tha‘alibi's Adab al-muluk, a Local Mirror for Princes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Julia Bray
Affiliation:
Universities of Manchester, Edinburgh and St. Andrews
Yasir Suleiman
Affiliation:
King's College, Cambridge
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Summary

Most Islamic mirrors for princes rest not on projected Utopias but on examples from the past. They draw upon a fund of wisdom attributed to ancient Greek and Persian as well as Muslim sages, and for all their differences of format, their guiding precepts are often expressed in ‘strikingly similar terms’. Yet, as Louise Marlow concludes, in the most recent and wide-ranging survey of Islamic advice literature:

[Although] certain themes of advice literature have endured since antiquity in diverse cultural milieux … each example is strikingly individual, tailored to specific circumstances and specific writer-ruler relationships. The significance of a motif, however often it has been invoked before, is shaped with each utterance by the particularities of time, place, author, and audience. Consequently, works of advice literature resonate on several levels: they evoke and participate in a longstanding literary, cultural, and political continuum, and they carry immediate and specific meanings and implications (2007: 55).

Relevance to specific circumstances applies regardless of the language of composition of a piece of advice literature and of the linguistic politics surrounding it, which are not always easy to interpret. Thus Arabic was the Islamic language which first received the freight of ancient wisdom from the peoples conquered in the first/seventh century, and this freight passed back to, and was shared with, Persian, when the latter re-emerged as a language of high culture in the fourth/ tenth century.

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Living Islamic History
Studies in Honour of Professor Carole Hillenbrand
, pp. 32 - 46
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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