CEU Press
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Preface
Preface to the 2003 Impression
Symbols and Abbreviations
Figure: Anatomy of the Muquaddima
Biographical Note
Chapter One The Primacy of the Historical
The Criterion of Historical Significance
The Structure of the Historical State
Chapter Two The Problematization of History
Anatomy of the Muqaddima
The Muqaddima: Epitome with Glosses
The Analogical Regime
Chapter Three The Historicity of Kitāb al’ Ibar
Bibliographical Orientations
Addendum to the 2003 Impression
Index
Since its publication in 1981, this book has established itself as the major new interpretation of the historical concept of Ibn Khaldûn, the great figure of Arab-Islamic letters and of historical thought overall--a figure generally thought to be on a par with Thucydides, Vico, Herder and others of similar stature.
The author has eschewed the ahistorical interpretations to which Ibn Khaldûn has normally been subjected, both by authors who have sought unduly to modernise his thought, and by those who sought to freeze it in stereotypical models of Islamic philosophy.
Ibn Khaldûn is not only a true historical source of his time; he is also taken as the unchallenged sociological and cultural interpreter of medieval North Africa and much of medieval and modern Arab-Islamic culture as well. The validity of his discourse is considered to be so universal as to confer upon his ideas the status of progenitor--or, at least, anticipator--of a great variety of modern ideas.
Aziz al-Azmeh is Distinguished Professor at the Central European University, Budapest.