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Mecca [Hardcover]

F. E. Peters (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 31, 1994

For the non-Muslim, Mecca is the most forbidden of Holy Cities--and yet, in many ways it is the best known. Muslim historians and geographers have studied it, and countless pilgrims and travelers--many of them European Christians in disguise--have left behind lively and well-publicized accounts of life in Mecca and its associated shrine-city of Medina, where the Prophet lies buried. The stories of all these figures, holy men and heathens alike, come together in this book to offer a remarkably revealing literary portrait of the city's traditions and urban life and of the surrounding area. Closely following the publication of F. E. Peters's The Hajj (Princeton, 1994), which describes the perilous pilgrimage itself from the travelers' perspectives, this collection of writings and commentary completes the historical travelogue.

The accounts begin with the Muslims themselves, in the patriarchal age of Abraham and Ishmael, and trace the sometimes glorious and sometimes sad history of Islam's central shrine down to the last Grand Sharif of Mecca, Husayn ibn Ali, whose fragile kingdom was overtaken by the House of Sa`ud in 1926. Because of chronic flooding and constant rebuilding, there is little or no material evidence for the early history of Islam's holy cities. By assembling, analyzing, and fashioning these literary accounts of Mecca, however, Peters supplies us with a vivid sense of place and human interaction, much as he did in his widely acclaimed Jerusalem (Princeton, 1985).


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

To most Westerners, the sacred Islamic cities of Mecca and Medina and their surrounding haram (the area off-limits to non-Muslims) are exotic, hidden places. We know that they are the destinations of the great annual pilgrimage called the hajj-but what else do we know? Thoroughly researched and clearly presented, this work goes far toward enlightening us. So far as Peters (Near Eastern languages, New York Univ.) has been able to discover, there has been no archaeology done in the region at all. So he has perforce gathered strictly literary evidence from a wide range of writings, both Islamic and Western, including national archives, travelogs, histories, and private journals. Full of informative detail, and with substantial notes and bibliography, his work is a true scholar's guidebook to further study and not for casual readers. Recommended for academic libraries and public libraries with large collections in history and Islamic affairs.
James F. Deroche, Alexandria, Va.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

The author ... has sought to assemble, arrange, and explain the accounts of Muslims as well as non-Muslims--from sincere to fraudulent--about the Holy Land.... F. E. Peters has definitely succeeded in accomplishing his goal.... [He] has definitely done an outstanding job of explaining the accounts of various travelers to the Holy Land. -- Review

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 504 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (October 31, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 069103267X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691032672
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.6 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,491,653 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

F. E. Peters

Francis Edward Peters is Professor Emeritus of History, Religion and Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University. A native of NYC, where he attended Regis H.S. and still lives, he was trained at St. Louis University in Classical Languages (AB, MA) and in Philosophy (Ph.L.), and received his Ph.D. from Princeton in Islamic Studies. Peters, though formally trained as both a classicist and an Islamicist, is best known as a historian of religion, a field where he was a pioneer, and is now the leading scholar, in the comparative study of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It is a subject on which he has written more than twenty books, most notably the two volume The Monotheists (Princeton, 2003), The Children of Abraham. A New Edition (Princeton, 2004) and The Voice, The Word, The Books: The Sacred Scriptures of the Jews, Christians and Muslims (Princeton 2007). His most recent, Jesus and Muhammad: Parallel Tracks, Parallel Lives appeared from Oxford University Press in 2010, and he has contributed as well to the Oxford Bibliographies Online. .

In addition to his more than forty years teaching everything from Homer to Hasidism in the classrooms of NYU (where he chaired both the Classics and the Middle Eastern Studies departments and won a number of teaching awards), as well as accepting visiting professorships and guest lectureships at many of America's and the Middle East's top universities, Peters has been featured on CBS' TV series Sunrise Semester and on a variety of TV documentaries and served as New York's WPIX TV anchorman for the original moon landing. He has three audio courses on tape and CD in the Barnes and Noble Portable Professor series. He is presently serving as Distinguished Visiting Professor at the General Theological Seminary in New York City and has assisted in curating public exhibitions at Holy Cross College, The British Library and The New York Public Library.

 

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rule of thumb, May 28, 2005
By 
Joe Schmoe "MeLove2Read" (Jersey City, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mecca (Hardcover)
Whenever Daniel Pipes gives a low rating....the book is well worth the read.

Nothing ever written positively about Islam is digestable to this man, which is why he was canned from the Institute of Peace. Just read what his colleagues wrote about his phobias.


buy the book!!
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mecca, July 22, 2001
This review is from: Mecca (Hardcover)
"Mecca" is a companion volume to Peters' earlier 1994 study, "The Hajj: The Muslim Pilgrimage to Mecca and the Holy Places" (reviewed in Middle East Quarterly, September 1994). That book focuses on the experience of the pilgrimage, in Mecca and outside it; this one focuses on the geography and history of what Peters calls "the Muslim Holy Land," by which he means "Mecca and Medina and their spiritual environs." "Literary history" points to the fact that there is little or no material evidence for Islam's holy cities before 1925, this book's cut-off date, compelling the researcher to rely almost exlusively on written sources.

As in the earlier volume, Peters mixes his own scholarly findings here with long excerpts from primary sources, both Muslim and Western. Rather than impose his own schema on the materials at hand, he follows their vagaries, jumping from the early centuries of Islam to the Age of Discovery with only a few pages on the intervening centuries. The result is an unusual but highly successful mix of literary collage with academic inquiry. Subjects especially worth noting include the account of the Qarmatians' conquest of Mecca in 930 and their stealing of the Black Stone; the story of Thomas Keith, a Scotsman taken prisoner by the Ottoman forces who converted to Islam and eventually became governor of Medina in 1815; and late nineteenth-century British musings about the recruitment of spies to keep an eye on possible seditious activity during the pilgrimage activities in Mecca.

Middle East Quarterly, March 1995

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WE CAN WRITE no history of Mecca in the centuries before Muhammad, during what the later Muslim authories called "The Barbarism" or "The Ignorance" (jahiliyya). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
food against hunger, wadi bottom, one arcade, two sanctuaries, lesser pilgrimage, venerable house, pilgrimage season
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Red Sea, Ibn Ishaq, Ali Bey, Muhammad Ali, Sharif of Mecca, Ibn Iyas, Ibn Jubayr, Abu Bakr, All Bey, Grand Sharif, Muhammad All, Prester John, Abu Tahir, Abd Manaf, Abu Talib, Ottoman Sultan, Sharif Barakat, Ibrahim Pasha, Sharif Ghalib, Commander of the Faithful, Indian Ocean, Abu Qubays, Foreign Office Papers, Ibn Battuta, Muhammad ibn Awn
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