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The Islamic Background of Ibn Khaldūn's Political Theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
It seems an odd coincidence that within the last three years there should have appeared four different studies devoted to the work of Ibn Khaldūn, considering that in the half-century following the issue of de Slane's translation of the Muqaddima, apart from von Kremer's study and a few short articles drawing the attention of a wider circle of students in various countries to its significance, it was not until 1917 that the first monograph on the subject was published by Dr. Ṭāhā Ḥusain. This work, like most of the earlier articles, dealt primarily with the sociological aspects of Ibn Khaldūn's historical theory, and the same interest predominates in all but one of the three or four articles published since 1917. Of the latest studies it may be said that, though still giving prominence to the social aspect,they cover as a whole a rather wider ground. Dr. Gaston Bouthoul, indeed, limits himself in his title to Ibn Khaldun's “Social Philosophy”, but the contents of his essay overleap these bounds, especially the first thirty pages, devoted to a very suggestive analysis of the personality and intellectual outlook of the historian. Professor Schmidt's tractate is in the nature of a survey of the field ; he assembles and examines the views of earlier writers on different aspects of Ibn Khaldun's work, but does not put forward any synthesis of his own. Lastly, the two recent German works of Drs. Kamil Ayad and Erwin Rosenthal mark a return towards the more strictly
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- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 7 , Issue 1 , February 1933 , pp. 23 - 31
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- Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1933
References
page 23 note 1 Les Prolegomènes historiques, Paris, 1863–8.Google Scholar
page 23 note 2 Kremer, A. von, Ibn Chaldûn und seine Kuliurgeschichte der islamischen Reiche, S.-B. Ak. Wien, 1878. Full bibliographies of the other articles will be found in any of the works mentioned below.Google Scholar
page 23 note 3 Hussain, Taha, Étude analytique et critique de la philosophie sociale d'lbn Khaldoun, Paris, 1917.Google Scholar
page 23 note 4 Bouthoul, Gaston, Ibn Khaldoun, 8a Philosophie sociale, Paris (Geuthner), 1930, pp. 95.Google Scholar
page 23 note 5 Schmidt, Nathaniel, Ibn Khaldūn, historian, sociologist, and philosopher, (Columbia U.P.), 1930, pp. 68.Google Scholar
page 23 note 6 Ayad, Kamil, Die Geschichts- und Gesellschaftslehre Ibn Haldūns, 2tes. Heft der “Forschungen zur Geschichts- und Gesellschaftslehre” hrsg. v. Kurt Breysig, Stuttgart and Berlin, 1930, pp. x + 209.Google Scholar
page 23 note 7 Rosenthal, Erwin, Ibn Khalduns Gedanken über den Stoat, Beiheft 25 der Historischen Zeitschrift, München and Berlin (R. Oldenbourg), 1932, pp. x + 118.Google Scholar
page 24 note 1 Mention may also be made here of the Special Number issued by the Arabic journal al Hachth of Aleppo in Sept, 1932, to celebrate the sexcentenary of Ibn Khaldūn's birth. The articles, which are all from the hands of leading Arabic scholars of the present day, are somewhat unequal in value, but demonstrate the very keen interest shown m his work in modern Arabic circles. A note of dissidence is, however, introduced by the encyclopaedist Farīd Waǵdī, who in a brief and rather unsatisfactory article argues that the Mugaddima is a work neither of sociology nor of the philosophy of history.
page 24 note 2 The necessity for a revision of de Slane's somewhat loose translation (indispensable as it still is) has long been known to Orientalists, and it is one of the merits of R.'s book that, with some assistance from Professor Bergstrasser, he provides a much more literal and accurate version of the passages translated, so far as I have tested it. Some errors remain, however, eg p 41 “hat den Namen Komgtum, und es ist sem Sem, das sie beherrscht” (tusammā ‘l-malakata wahīya kawnuhu yamlukuhum); p. 97. “und auf jede emzelne von ihnen (diesen Kunsten) grosse Sorgfalt zu verwenden” (li'tta'annuqi fī kulli wāhidm sanāi'u kathīratun). Doubtful words or readings are responsible for some errors, p. 23. ‘I suspect the word ‘umūmīyatun” rendered as “die Bevolkerung (?)” to mean something like “complex of tribal relationships”; a few lines further on “unterstutzen sie”, which makes nonsense in the context, is due to an apparent error of ma'ūnatun” for ma'unatu” (“source of expense”); p. 57. “einen Genuss aus dem Streit machen (?)” has arisen from a misreading bi'lkhilūfi for bi'lkhalūqi (“enjoyment of worldly happiness”).
page 25 note 1 Muqaddima to Bk. i (Quatremère i, 65).
page 26 note 1 First Muqaddima to Bk. i, section 1 (Q. i, 72).
page 26 note 2 Al-Ḥisba fi'l-Islām (Cairo, Mu'aiyad Press, 1318 H.), p. 3.Google Scholar
page 27 note 1 Q. i, 337–8; translated in Rosenthal, , p. 39.Google Scholar
page 27 note 2 Q. ii, 290, 11. 9–18
page 29 note 1 Cf. esp. Bk. ii, chap. 6, translated in R., pp. 68–9 (Q. i, 230–2), and ii, 27 (Q. i, 275).
page 29 note 2 Bk. iii, chap. 6 (Q. i, 286–90), translated in R., p. 54.
page 30 note 1 Bk 1 ch 1, 1st Muqaddima (Q 1, 70–1).
page 30 note 2 Bk 11, ch 20 (Q l, 259–60)
page 30 note 3 Bk 111, ch 4 (Q I, 284)
page 30 note 4 Bk 111, ch 25, translated m R, 61–2 (Q I, 342–3).
page 30 note 5 De Slane's translation misses the point of the phrase min ghairi nazari'shshar'i inserted in Q after bi muqtada's siyāsati wa” ahkāmihā.
page 30 note 6 The same judgment is expressed in a slightly different fashion in Bk 11, ch. 20 (Q. i, 259–60), from which it is clear that Ibn Khaldun's connotation of the term Caliphate i general and not restricted to the historical Caliphate.
page 30 note 7 It is the chief defect of Dr Rosenthal's otherwise admirable survey of Ibn Khaldūn's political thought that he has overlooked the logical sequence of his exposition, and bv shuffling about his chapters unwittingly distorts his point of view. For example, in the section headed “The evolution of the State” the order of the passages which he has selected is as follows Bh 11, ch 15, 111, 14, 111, 17, 11, 16, 111. 15, 11, 18, 111, 11, 111, 12, 111, 16, 11, 22, 111, 2, 111, 3; 11, 4, 11, 5, 11, 23, 111, 7, 111, 8 111, 18, 111, 10, 111, 13, 111, 47, 111, 46.
page 31 note 1 Dr. Ayad points out that Ibn Khaldūn denies that the Caliphate (or Imāmate) is one of the “pillars of the faith”, but fails to observe that it is the Shi'ite doctrine that he rejects, and that in his arguments against the rational necessity of the Caliphate (iii, 26; Q. i, 345–6) he is in complete agreement with the classical doctrine expounded by al-Māwardī (p. 4).
page 31 note 2 Bk. iii, ch. 28 (Q. i, 367 fl.); note especially walam yazhari ‘ttaghayyuru illā fi'l-wāzi'i ‘lladhī kāna dīnan thumma ‘rqalaba ‘aṣabīyatan wa-saifan (Q. 375, 97ndash;10). This instance brings out clearly that what Ibn Khaldūn means by “natural” development in social and political life is very different from the mechanical doctrine which Dr. Ayad regards as the outstanding feature of his theory.
page 31 note 3 M. Bouthoul's accusation (p. 88) that Ibn Khaldūn's outlook is governed by a kind of intellectual sadism, characteristic of “mediaeval mentality ”, appears to me very wide of the mark. Cf. again Bk. v, ch. 6 (Q. ii, 290).
page 31 note 4 Bk. iii, ch. 38 (Q. ii, 79).
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