Text
The new Cambridge history of Islam, v.3, c.1-2
Volume 3: The Eastern Islamic World Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries, as the faith crossed new cultural boundaries, the trader and the mystic assumed as great an importance as the soldier and the administrator. Distinctive Islamic idioms began to emerge from other great linguistic traditions apart form Arabic, especially in Turkish, Persian, Urdu, ...As the essays in this collection demonstrate, three major features distinguish the time place both from the earlier experience of Islam and from the universal modernity of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
| 150901972 | 297 ROB n/3.1 | Moriah Foundation | Available |
| 150901973 | 297 ROB n/3.2 | Z. HANDIMAN | Available |
No other version available