Banister, History and Tradition in the Mamluk Court (2015)
[Bibliography]

Abbreviation
Banister, History and Tradition in the Mamluk Court (2015)
Form of publication
Dissertation

Mustafa Banister, The Abbasid Caliphate of Cairo (1261-1517): History and Tradition in the Mamluk Court, (https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/81437/3/Banister_Mustafa_201511_PhD_thesis.pdf Toronto 2015)

Data

Mustafa Banister, Doctor of Philosophy Department of Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations University of Toronto: A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations University of Toronto (2015)

Abstract: This dissertation investigates the two-and-a-half century evolution of Islam’s most prominent leadership institution, the Abbasid caliphate, after its restoration in Cairo following the Mongol destruction of Baghdad in 1258. Kept under the supervision of the Mamluk sultans of Egypt and Syria (1250-1517), modern scholars tend to conclude that this so-called Abbasid “shadow” caliphate merely legitimized Mamluk rulers and little else within their society. Despite having shed much of its original power by the Mamluk period, the Abbasid caliphate of Cairo retained a definite measure of religious authority and enjoyed the reverence of significant sectors of the Cairene population including religious scholars, chroniclers, chancery scribes, poets, travelers, and, it seems, enjoyed even wider resonance among the masses of the local Muslim citizenry.

A dynastic study of the Cairo Abbasids combined with analysis of contemporary opinions of the caliphate and its Mamluk sponsors rendered from juristic writing, advice literature, historiography, bureaucratic literature, and administrative documents allows the present study to move toward a comprehensive delineation of the significance of the revived office to the society in which it functioned.

Although the caliphs as individuals were largely disposable and powerless, the office they held retained importance throughout the Mamluk period and contributed to larger civilizational understandings of “Caliphate” that allowed the inclusion of the Mamluk regime and its various administrative subdivisions.

Key words
Abbasids, dynasty.
Arab sources / Arabic sources.
Arabs.
Cairo.
Clergy, clergymen.
Coin, coins.
Egypt.
Ideology.
Inscription / inscriptions.
Institutions.
Islam.
Islamic clergy.
Literature.
Mamluk art.
Mamluk Sultanate.
Mamluks.
Medieval era.
Muslims.
Scholars.
Sufis / Mystics.
Theology.