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Appendix 2
more modern social and economic concepts. In the United States
F.McGraw Donner has produced a history of the Arab conquests and
promised a methodological justification for his work. There is no
doubt, however, that many now feel inhibitions
in this sort of work,
and turn instead to source analysis or historiography. Werner Ende
and E.L.Petersen come immediately to mind.
One recent major work has attempted to accept the findings of
Goldziher, Schacht and Noth and still find a methodology for using
the Muslim source material. In her
Slaves on horses
Patricia Crone
argued for a biographical or prosopographical approach. Indicating
that whenever we can check the basic information given in the
Muslim sources (names and dates of caliphs and governors, and so
on) by reference to independent sources (for instance, coins,
inscriptions, non-Muslim literature) the
two usually provide mutual
confirmation, she maintained that it is unlikely that all of the
information in Muslim sources can be dismissed as later invention or
merely literary
topoi
. Such apparently incidental details as those
regarding an individual’s status and tribal or factional alignment, his
marriage ties and his social or political links, are likely to be based
on reality, and it is this sort of information, rather than, for example,
the accounts of the motives of rebels or
caliphs engaged in the major
events, which the historian should concentrate on. From this point of
view the cohesiveness of Dr Crone’s book is as impressive as its
conceptual sophistication. A consequence of this approach, and one
which has been anticipated or shared by others, is a movement away
from the straightforward narrative of political events towards a
greater interest in institutions, social and religious history.
M.G.Morony’s work is another example of this trend.
In the modern Islamic,
and especially Arab, world Umayyad
history has sometimes served as a mirror reflecting current political
and religious preoccupations. This does not mean that all modern
Arab or Muslim writing on the period should be read as a comment
on current affairs or that one can forecast what a particular writer
will say if one knows his religious or political position first. But
since the Umayyad period was crucial for the arabisation and
islamisation of the Middle East, it is obvious that Arabs or Muslims
pondering their identity in the modern world will find much food for
thought in the history of the dynasty.
In particular, the possible tension
between Islam and Arab
nationalism could affect views of the Umayyads. From the Arab
nationalist perspective the dynasty could be seen as one of potential