{"title":"The Mamlūk institution in early Muslim India","authors":"Peter Jackson","doi":"10.1017/S0035869X00108585","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When Muslim forces under the Ghurid sultan, Mu'izz al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Sām, made their first major breakthrough into Hindūstān in the 1190s, they brought with them two institutions that had long since taken root in the Islamic world. One was the iqṭā' or assignment of land or its revenue, in some cases in return for military service (sometimes misrepresented as “fief” on the Western European model). The other was the mamlūk, or military slave. Mamlūk status, it should be stressed, bore none of the degrading connotations associated with other types of slavery: mamlūks – generally Turks from the Eurasian steppelands – were highly prized by their masters, receiving both instruction in the Islamic faith and a rigorous training in the martial arts, and were not employed in any menial capacity. The mamlūk institution, whose origins go back to the first century of Islam, came into vogue from the first half of the third/ninth century, as the ‘Abbasid Caliphs built up a corps of Turkish mamlūk guards and their example was followed, with the disintegration of their empire, by the various autonomous dynasties that sprang up in the provinces. Turkish slave officers themselves went on to found dynasties, as in the case of the Tulunids and the Ikhshidids in Egypt and the Ghaznawids in the eastern Iranian world. The institution surely entered upon its heyday in the seventh/thirteenth century, with the military coup of 648/1250 in Cairo: a group of mamlūk officers overthrew the last Ayyubid sultan of Egypt and inaugurated a regime in which slave status was the essential qualification for high military and administrative office.","PeriodicalId":81727,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland","volume":"122 1","pages":"340 - 358"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1990-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1017/S0035869X00108585","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/S0035869X00108585","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

When Muslim forces under the Ghurid sultan, Mu'izz al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Sām, made their first major breakthrough into Hindūstān in the 1190s, they brought with them two institutions that had long since taken root in the Islamic world. One was the iqṭā' or assignment of land or its revenue, in some cases in return for military service (sometimes misrepresented as “fief” on the Western European model). The other was the mamlūk, or military slave. Mamlūk status, it should be stressed, bore none of the degrading connotations associated with other types of slavery: mamlūks – generally Turks from the Eurasian steppelands – were highly prized by their masters, receiving both instruction in the Islamic faith and a rigorous training in the martial arts, and were not employed in any menial capacity. The mamlūk institution, whose origins go back to the first century of Islam, came into vogue from the first half of the third/ninth century, as the ‘Abbasid Caliphs built up a corps of Turkish mamlūk guards and their example was followed, with the disintegration of their empire, by the various autonomous dynasties that sprang up in the provinces. Turkish slave officers themselves went on to found dynasties, as in the case of the Tulunids and the Ikhshidids in Egypt and the Ghaznawids in the eastern Iranian world. The institution surely entered upon its heyday in the seventh/thirteenth century, with the military coup of 648/1250 in Cairo: a group of mamlūk officers overthrew the last Ayyubid sultan of Egypt and inaugurated a regime in which slave status was the essential qualification for high military and administrative office.
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早期穆斯林印度的Mamlūk制度
19世纪90年代,当古里尔苏丹穆伊兹·al- d·n Muḥammad b. Sām领导下的穆斯林军队首次在Hindūstān取得重大突破时,他们带来了两个早已在伊斯兰世界扎根的机构。一种是iqṭā',或土地或其收入的转让,在某些情况下是作为服兵役的回报(有时在西欧模式中被歪曲为“封地”)。另一个是mamlūk,即军奴。应该强调的是,Mamlūk的地位没有任何与其他类型的奴隶制有关的有辱人格的含义:mamlūks -通常是来自欧亚草原的土耳其人-受到主人的高度重视,接受伊斯兰信仰的指导和严格的武术训练,并且不从事任何卑贱的工作。mamlūk制度,其起源可以追溯到伊斯兰教的第一世纪,从第三/第九世纪上半叶开始流行,因为阿拔斯哈里发建立了一支土耳其mamlūk卫队,随着他们帝国的解体,他们的榜样被各省兴起的各种自治王朝所效仿。土耳其的奴隶官员自己也建立了王朝,比如埃及的图卢尼王朝和伊克希德王朝,以及伊朗东部的伽色纳威德王朝。在公元648/1250年的开罗军事政变中,这一制度确实在7 / 13世纪进入了鼎盛时期:一群mamlūk军官推翻了埃及最后一个阿尤比苏丹,并建立了一个政权,在这个政权中,奴隶身份是高级军事和行政职位的基本资格。
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