This book deals with the evolution of Islamic state and society from the 10th to the 14th centuries, focusing on the history of the Arab society under the iqtÌ£Äâ (allocated tax revenue) system. The book offers a well documented study of the system with its use of hitherto unpublished Arabic manuscripts.
The introductory chapter deals with the historical origins of the iqtÌ£Äâ system, while chapters that follow discuss the history of the system in Iraq, Syria and Egypt, including systematic studies on the rural life and peasantry in Egypt.
State and Rural Society in Medieval Islam is the first thorough, book-length study to show how this system may explain various historical phenomena in medieval Islam. The iqtÌ£Äâ system now can be seen as a system with a comprehensive life of its own.
Tsugitaka Sato, Litt.D. in History, the University of Tokyo (1942-2011), was Professor of History at the University of Tokyo. He published extensively on social and economic history in medieval Islam including Islamic Urbanism in Human History: Political Power and Social Networks (Kegan Paul International Ltd., 1996).
All those interested in social and economic history, the history of state and society in pre-modern Islamic countries, as well as Byzantine and European medievalists.