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Abbasid: Life and Law

Panel XII-12, 2020 Annual Meeting

On Thursday, October 15 at 01:30 pm

Panel Description
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Disciplines
History
Participants
Presentations
  • Dr. Philip Grant
    The persistence of the Zanj Rebellion against the ?Abbasid caliphate has frequently been attributed to the inaccessibility of the marshlands of southern Iraq. The historiography has focused on other issues, however: to what extent it was a “slave revolt”; the rebels’ ethnic origins; class, religion, and ideology; its importance for the disintegration of the ?Abbasid empire. Sources for the revolt are both limited—al-?abar??s history, some remarks in al-Mas?udi’s Meadows of Gold, two coins, and references in later writers which add little to our knowledge—and yet extensive, given the great detail of al-?abar??s account. The high salinity and frequent erosion and deposits of land by water in the marshlands (ba???i?) of southern Iraq mean that the site of the Zanj capital, al-Mukht?ra, is unlikely ever to be discovered. Yet this archaeological futility provides a key to rethinking the revolt using existing sources. The hydropolitics of the revolt can be mapped by drawing on approaches to materiality and non-human agency developed in STS, and on the anthropology and history of water, deltas, and marshlands. Structurally speaking, the marshes have long been a major agent in local resistance against centralized control, both because of their inaccessibility and because of the resources they provide, whether from alluvial agriculture, fishing, or the waters themselves. Nonetheless, as a space of transport, the region was also central to the trade routes, via the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean, whose control was important to authorities and elites upriver in Baghdad and Samarra. Joining structure and conjuncture, a major factor in the revolt was the hydrogeology of the region. Potentially fertile lands were covered with natron (sib?kh), a mix of types of sodium carbonate and related salts, removal of which was the task of the Zanj slaves mobilized by landowners, drawing on the approval provided by Islamic jurists for the cultivation of “dead lands”. The hydropolitics of the marshlands was thus also a “natropolitics”, joining water, sodium salts, property relations, ideological justifications, and forced labor in an attempt to fix and render profitable a fundamentally fluid ecology. Finally, the actual fighting was itself profoundly structured by water: it provided a battle “field”, whether the marshes or the canals of Basra; acted as an obstacle to the combatants; and was deployed as a weapon when one side diverted or obstructed waters to encumber its adversaries.
  • Mr. Hassaan Shahawy
    Abu Hanifa notoriously used istihsan (juristic preference) to make seemingly subjective rulings. In response, al-Shafii declared istihsan invalid. Later Hanafis retorted that al-Shafii had misunderstood the term. Western scholars similarly disagree on its definition. To resolve this debate, and to understand the role of subjective reasoning in early Iraqi law, this paper presents an empirical dataset of every istihsan ruling (approx. 500) in the Kitab al-Asl of Muhammad al-Shaybani. In so doing, the paper strives to correct a few critical misconceptions about istihsan. Firstly, the paper shows that, despite istihsan’s stereotypical association with lenience, it only connotes lenience in a minority of cases, often functioning instead to make the law more stringent. This insight, coupled with the paper’s articulation of the diverse justifications (approx. 60) that might underlie an istihsan ruling, shows that it was not just a mechanism for ease, but allowed jurists to intervene when the law clashed with their moral or social sensibilities. Secondly, the paper reveals quantifiable differences in how early Iraqi jurists used istihsan, with Abu Hanifa utilizing it most subjectively, followed by Abu Yusuf, followed by al-Shaybani. This confirms the conventional narrative of early Hanafi doctrine aspiring to become more textual, and allows us to track that development in concrete terms by observing how discrete types of reasoning became more or less favored over time. Finally, the paper places these findings within the context of 9th century Iraqi legal theory, showing how this reframing of istihsan sheds light on many puzzles of the formative period, including early Iraqi responses to al-Shafii, as well as the state of legal theory before usul al-fiqh. Indeed, research on the theoretical battles over istihsan in the 9th century reveals an immature Basran line of legal theory (led by figures like al-Jahiz and Muways b. Imran) that openly embraced the subjectivity inherent to istihsan, and whose successors attempted to make logical, theological, and textual proofs for why jurists have the authority to make law without evidence. Needless to say, these radical arguments did not survive into classical usul. In short, this paper tells the story of istihsan, and in so doing, tells a broader story about the rise of an Islamic legal orthodoxy that aspired to objective legal reasoning.