Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam Summary
Publisher: Princeton Univ Pr | ISBN: 0691054800 | edition 1987 | PDF | 301 pages
Publisher: Princeton Univ Pr | ISBN: 0691054800 | edition 1987 | PDF | 301 pages
Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam is an extremely controversial but
effectively argued and extensively documented work. The author presents a
radical challenge to a number of standard assertions about the
socio-economic milieu in which Islam arose." -R. Stephen Humphreys,
University of Wisconsin, Madison Patricia Crone reassesses one of the
most widely accepted dogmas in contemporary accounts of the beginnings
of Islam, the supposition that Mecca was a trading center thriving on
the export of aromatic spices to the Mediterranean. Pointing out that
the conventional opinion is based on classical accounts of the trade
between south Arabia and the Mediterranean some 600 years earlier than
the age of Muhammad, Dr. Crone argues that the land route described in
these records was short-lived and that the Muslim sources make no
mention of such goods. In addition to changing our view of the role of
trade, the author reexamines the evidence for the religious status of
pre-Islamic Mecca and seeks to elucidate the nature of the sources on
which we should reconstruct our picture of the birth of the new religion
in Arabia. Patricia Crone is professor of Islamic history at the
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. Her books include Medieval
Islamic Political Thought (Edinburgh 2004) and Pre-Industrial Societies:
Anatomy of the Premodern World (second edition, Oxford 2003).