MESA Banner
myMESA
Mohammed Allehbi
Vanderbilt University
Occupation
Graduate Student (Doctoral)
Contact
ABOUT
Mohammed Allehbi is a sixth year Ph.D. candiddate in Medieval Islamic History with a focus on the late Abbasid era. He received his M.A in Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Chicago in June 2014. His thesis "Streets of Baghdad: The War between the ?Ayy?r?n and the Government during the Buyid and Seljuq Eras" examined what factors determined the successes and failures of these governments in Baghdad in their interactions with a non-governmental paramilitary group known as the ?ayy?r?n. He is currently exploring his main research interest; examining the development and application of criminal justice in premodern Arabic-Islamic societies (700-1200 CE). He analyzes the enforcement of criminal law throughout the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean, and the legal dichotomy and political-religious divide inherent within this system over time. His advisor is Professor David Wasserstein.
Discipline
History
Sub Areas
Middle East/Near East Studies
Medieval
7th-13th Centuries
Islamic Studies
Iranian Studies
Geographic Areas of Interest
Iraq
Iran
Egypt
Syria
Specialties
The Ayyarun In Medieval Islamic History
Crime And Punishment In Medieval Islamic History
Urban Societies In Medieval Islamic History
Languages
Arabic (advanced)
Persian (intermediate)
German (elementary)
French (elementary)
Education
MA | 2014 | Social Science | University of Chicago
BA | 2010 | Marketing | Prince Sultan University
Abstracts
The Ṭālibid Syndics of Baghdad: Representatives of a Community in Transition Sectarian Strife or Political rivalry? : Abbasid and Seljuq relations within a Ḥanbalī and Shāfiʿī conflict (469-475 AH/ 1077-1083 AD) Parallels in Criminal Justice: The Abbasids and Imperial Rome Put them in Narrow Cells: The Birth of Criminal Prisons in the First Century of Islam The Shurṭa in al-Andalus: An Alternative History of Islamic Criminal Justice