弥赛亚主义、理性主义和亚洲间的联系:贾汉吉里家族(1608 - 1611)和莫卧儿乌拉玛的社会思想史

Pub Date : 2017-07-01 DOI:10.1177/0019464617710744
Corinne Lefèvre
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文以卡西姆·拉豪里(Qasim Lahauri)的《Majalis-i Jahangiri》(1608-11)为依据,探讨了莫卧儿皇帝贾汉吉尔(1605-27)与众多学者(从婆罗门、乌拉玛到耶稣会教士和犹太学者)的一些讨论。到目前为止,关于伊斯兰教和涉及穆斯林知识分子的辩论数量最多,在几个方面尤为重要。首先,因为它们阐明了贾汉吉尔是如何跟随他的父亲阿克巴尔(1556-605)的脚步,通过与理性的强烈接触来调和他的弥赛亚主张,并将这种结合转变为忏悔和国家建设的强大工具。这些对话也为重新思考莫卧儿乌拉玛的社会思想史提供了有希望的途径,因为它们捕捉到了帝国庇护下的挑战和调整,描绘了知识分子之间的影响力和地位的争夺(特别是印度穆斯林和伊朗的lettracims之间),并揭示了相对不为人知的人物或更杰出的个人未被探索的方面。此外,来自伊朗的学者——在较小程度上也来自中亚——在印度法庭的司法和宗教纠纷中所扮演的特殊角色表明,亚洲之间的联系和网络在塑造莫卧儿意识形态的过程中是多么重要,同时也表明,在被纳入帝国之前,不断流动的移徙者和苏拉玛是如何受到纪律约束的。
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Messianism, rationalism and inter-Asian connections: The Majalis-i Jahangiri (1608–11) and the socio-intellectual history of the Mughal ‘ulama
Relying on the Majalis-i Jahangiri (1608–11) by ʿAbd al-Sattar b. Qasim Lahauri, this essay explores some of the discussions the Mughal Emperor Jahangir (r. 1605–27) conducted with a wide range of scholars, from Brahmans and ʿulama to Jesuit padres and Jewish savants. By far the most numerous, the debates bearing on Islam and involving Muslim intellectuals are especially significant on several accounts. First, because they illuminate how, following in the steps of his father Akbar (r. 1556–605), Jahangir was able to conciliate his messianic claims with a strong engagement with reason and to turn this combination into a formidable instrument for confession and state building. These conversations also provide promising avenues to think afresh the socio-intellectual history of the Mughal ʿulama inasmuch as they capture the challenges and adjustments attendant on imperial patronage, depict the jockeying for influence and positions among intellectuals (particularly between Indo-Muslim and Iranian lettrés), and shed light on relatively little known figures or on unexplored facets of more prominent individuals. In addition, the specific role played by scholars hailing from Iran—and, to a lesser extent, from Central Asia—in the juridical-religious disputes of the Indian court shows how crucial inter-Asian connections and networks were in the fashioning of Mughal ideology but also the ways in which the ongoing flow of émigré ʿulama was disciplined before being incorporated into the empire.
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