This article describes how Islamic and Frankish legal devices complemented each other and were even combined to settle disagreements in the late medieval Middle East. For this purpose, it focuses on two legal institutions that provided responses to the biases of Islamic law against non-Muslims and to the prejudices of Franks against the local law. The first are the notaries sent to the Mamluk cities by the Venetian government to draw up legal documents and to support the transactions of Venetian merchants. The second are the new royal or siyāsa courts implemented by the sultans, where justice was dispensed by government officials instead of by traditional judges, or qāḍīs. Specifically, the article discusses, in a comparative manner, what constituted proof for Christians and Muslims, whether minorities could bear testimony or not, and how notaries and judges dealt with unbelievers. A common notarial culture, together with the expansion of siyāsa jurisdiction over the affairs of foreigners, brought about a much deeper legal interplay than has previously been understood. Ultimately, it is argued that Mediterranean medieval societies had evolving attitudes toward justice and diversity, and approached their own legal traditions in ways compatible with the conflict resolution, while constantly borrowing legal concepts about difference from each other.

Judging the Franks: Proof, Justice, and Diversity in Late Medieval Alexandria and Damascus

Apellániz, Francisco
2016-01-01

Abstract

This article describes how Islamic and Frankish legal devices complemented each other and were even combined to settle disagreements in the late medieval Middle East. For this purpose, it focuses on two legal institutions that provided responses to the biases of Islamic law against non-Muslims and to the prejudices of Franks against the local law. The first are the notaries sent to the Mamluk cities by the Venetian government to draw up legal documents and to support the transactions of Venetian merchants. The second are the new royal or siyāsa courts implemented by the sultans, where justice was dispensed by government officials instead of by traditional judges, or qāḍīs. Specifically, the article discusses, in a comparative manner, what constituted proof for Christians and Muslims, whether minorities could bear testimony or not, and how notaries and judges dealt with unbelievers. A common notarial culture, together with the expansion of siyāsa jurisdiction over the affairs of foreigners, brought about a much deeper legal interplay than has previously been understood. Ultimately, it is argued that Mediterranean medieval societies had evolving attitudes toward justice and diversity, and approached their own legal traditions in ways compatible with the conflict resolution, while constantly borrowing legal concepts about difference from each other.
2016
Inglese
58
02
350
378
29
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/comparative-studies-in-society-and-history/article/judging-the-franks-proof-justice-and-diversity-in-late-medieval-alexandria-and-damascus/71B35249E7CD62766B9ABE9732C044B6
Esperti anonimi
Islamic Law cross-cultural studies comparative law
The main reason I am submitting my article to CSSH is that my analysis of conflict resolution in Alexandria and Damascus, involving litigants, ideas and courts from both sides, goes beyond the interests of area studies, an approach that still characterizes most works on Islamic and Italian studies. Throughout the paper, I raise questions about the resemblances between Southern European and Islamic legal definitions and attitudes towards justice and diversity.
Internazionale
1
Apellániz, Francisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11574/184496
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