- Title Pages
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Maps
- Introduction
-
1 Etic Concepts and Emic Terms -
2 The State of the Art - Introduction
-
3 From Karbala to Damascus: A Relic with Multiple Shrines -
4 The Commemoration of al-Husayn in Fatimid Ascalon -
5 Excursus: Donations to Mosques and Shrines -
6 Why Ascalon? Christian Martyrs and Muslim Murābiṭūn (Defenders) -
7 Excursus: Medieval Pilgrimage – Victor Turner’s Input -
8 From Ascalon to Cairo: The Duplication of Sacred Space -
9 Excursus: Arabic Treatises in Praise of Ascalon -
10 The Shrine in Cairo under the Sunni Ayyubids and Mamluks -
11 Excursus: al-Husayn and Saladin in Palestinian Lore -
12 The Shrine in Ascalon under the Ayyubids and Mamluks -
13 Excursus: Ibn Taymiyya on the Veneration of the Head of al-Husayn -
14 Summary - Introduction
-
15 Rajab in Pre-Islamic Arabia and in Early Islam -
16 Excursus: The Founding of an Islamic Rajab Under Fatimid RuleLunar Calendar -
17 Rajab under Fatimid Rule -
18 Excursus: Istighfār (Seeking Divine Forgiveness) -
19 Rajab under the Ayyubids and Mamluks -
20 Excursus: Arabic Treatises in Praise of the Sacred Months -
21 Summary - Final Comments: Spacial and Temporal Sanctity
- Works Cited
- Index
Excursus: Medieval Pilgrimage – Victor Turner’s Input
Excursus: Medieval Pilgrimage – Victor Turner’s Input
- Chapter:
- (p.70) 7 Excursus: Medieval Pilgrimage – Victor Turner’s Input
- Source:
- Sacred Place and Sacred Time in the Medieval Islamic Middle East
- Author(s):
Daniella Talmon-Heller
- Publisher:
- Edinburgh University Press
This chapter explores the practicality of applying the inspiring theories and original terms developed by the anthropologist Victor Turner to research on medieval pilgrimage. It ends with the conclusion that concepts such as 'communitas', 'catchment area', and 'peripheral shrine' stimulate thought and creative reading of the sources, even if cannot be properly sustained on the basis of data collected from sporadic medieval excerpts.
Keywords: Victor Turner, pilgrimage, communitas, catchment area, shrine, centre and periphery, theory
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- Title Pages
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Maps
- Introduction
-
1 Etic Concepts and Emic Terms -
2 The State of the Art - Introduction
-
3 From Karbala to Damascus: A Relic with Multiple Shrines -
4 The Commemoration of al-Husayn in Fatimid Ascalon -
5 Excursus: Donations to Mosques and Shrines -
6 Why Ascalon? Christian Martyrs and Muslim Murābiṭūn (Defenders) -
7 Excursus: Medieval Pilgrimage – Victor Turner’s Input -
8 From Ascalon to Cairo: The Duplication of Sacred Space -
9 Excursus: Arabic Treatises in Praise of Ascalon -
10 The Shrine in Cairo under the Sunni Ayyubids and Mamluks -
11 Excursus: al-Husayn and Saladin in Palestinian Lore -
12 The Shrine in Ascalon under the Ayyubids and Mamluks -
13 Excursus: Ibn Taymiyya on the Veneration of the Head of al-Husayn -
14 Summary - Introduction
-
15 Rajab in Pre-Islamic Arabia and in Early Islam -
16 Excursus: The Founding of an Islamic Rajab Under Fatimid RuleLunar Calendar -
17 Rajab under Fatimid Rule -
18 Excursus: Istighfār (Seeking Divine Forgiveness) -
19 Rajab under the Ayyubids and Mamluks -
20 Excursus: Arabic Treatises in Praise of the Sacred Months -
21 Summary - Final Comments: Spacial and Temporal Sanctity
- Works Cited
- Index