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{{short description|1977 book by Patricia Crone and Michael Cook}} | |||
'''''Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World''''', 1977, is a book by scholars and ] of early Islam ] and ]. | |||
{{Infobox book | |||
| name = Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World | |||
| image = File:Hagarism.png | |||
| caption = Cover of the first edition | |||
| authors = ]<br/>] | |||
| country = United States | |||
| language = English | |||
| subject = ] | |||
| published = 1977 | |||
| media_type = Print (] and ]) | |||
| pages = 277 | |||
| isbn = 978-0521297547 | |||
| dewey = | |||
| congress = | |||
| oclc = | |||
}} | |||
'''''Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World''''' is a 1977 book about the early history of ] by the historians ] and ].<ref>{{Cite book|last1= Crone|first1= Patricia|title= Hagarism; The Making Of The Islamic World|last2= Cook|first2=Michael|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1977|isbn=0-521-21133-6|location=London|language=English}}</ref> Drawing on ] evidence and contemporary documents in ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], Crone and Cook depict an early Islam very different from the traditionally-accepted version derived from Muslim historical accounts.<ref name="Waines"/> | |||
The book presents a study of the roots of the ]ic religion and culture in ] ideas, ], ] and ]. | |||
According to the authors, "Hagarenes" was a term which near-contemporary sources used to name an ] movement of the 7th century CE whose conquests and resultant ] were inspired by ]. Crone and Cook contend that an alliance of Arabs and ] sought to reclaim the ] from the ], that the ] consists of 8th-century edits of various ] and other ] sources, and that ] was the herald of ] "the redeemer", a ].<ref name="Humphreys"/> | |||
== Thesis == | |||
Hagarism begins on the premise that ] historical scholarship on ]'s beginnings should be based on the highest standards of historical and ] and ] research rather than rely on the account of traditional Islamic mythos which has had a tendency to weave dogmatically-based historically irreconcilable and ] accounts of the community's past. Thus, relying exclusively on historical, archeological and ] evidence the authors reconstructs and present what they argue is a historically accurate and supported account of Islam's origins. | |||
:Virtually all accounts of the early development of Islam take it as axiomatic that it is possible to elicit at least the outlines of the process from the Islamic sources. It is however well-known that these sources are not demonstrably early. There is no hard evidence for the existence of the Koran in any form before the last decade of the seventh century, and the tradition which places this rather opaque revelation in its historical context is not attested before the middle of the eighth. The historicity of the Islamic tradition is thus to some degree problematic: while there are no cogent internal grounds for rejecting it, there are equally no cogent external grounds for accepting it. In the circumstances it is not unreasonable to proceed in the usual fashion by presenting a sensibly edited version of the tradition as historical fact. But equally, it makes some sense to regard the tradition as without determinate historical content, and to insist that what purport to be accounts of religious events in the seventh century are utilizable only for the study of religious ideas in the eighth.’ The Islamic sources provide plenty of scope for the implementation of these different approaches, but offer little that can be used in any decisive way to arbitrate between them. The only way out of the dilemma is thus to step outside the Islamic tradition altogether and start again. | |||
Drawing from early non-Muslim historical sources such as the ] AD 634, the authors present documents that record Muhammad preaching Judaism and proclaiming the advent of the Jewish Messiah , concluding that early Islam was a school of Messianic Judaism, whose aim was to conquer the Holy Land from the Byzantines with an army composed of Jews and Arabs. Early manuscripts suggest that Muhammad was the leader of a military expedition to conquer Jerusalem, and that the original Hijra actually referred to the journey from northern Arabia to that city. | |||
The hypotheses proposed in ''Hagarism'' have been widely criticized,<ref name="Waines"/><ref name="Humphreys"/><ref>{{cite book | title = A History of the Jews of Arabia | publisher = University of California Press | year= 1988 | location = Los Angeles, California |page = 110 | author = Gordon Newby| quote = The reconstructable past as presented in Hagarism relies only on sources outside of Islâm, and constructs a view of a past so as odds with conventional views that it has been almost universally rejected. This has been particularly so because the authors' criticisms of the possibilities of understanding the earliest periods of Islâm would seem, if applied as a general method to the sources used by historians of religion, to lead toward a kind of historical solipsism.}}</ref> and by 2002, the authors themselves had admitted that a lot of their hypotheses were wrong.<ref name="Tannous"/><ref>{{cite news | url= https://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/02/arts/scholars-are-quietly-offering-new-theories-of-the-koran.html?pagewanted=3&src=pm | title= Scholars Are Quietly Offering New Theories of the Koran | date= 2 March 2002 | accessdate= August 22, 2012 | author= Stille, Alexander | work= The New York Times |quote= Mr. Cook and Ms. Crone have revised some of their early hypotheses while sticking to others. ''We were certainly wrong about quite a lot of things,'' Ms. Crone said. ''But I stick to the basic point we made: that Islamic history did not arise as the classic tradition says it does.''}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |author-last=Khan |author-first=Liaquat Ali |title= Hagarism: The Story of a Book Written by Infidels for Infidels | newspaper=] |url= http://baltimorechronicle.com/2006/042606AliKhan.shtml |access-date=2020-11-08}}</ref> Nevertheless, the book has been hailed as a seminal work in its branch of Islamic historiography.<ref name="Waines"/><ref name="Humphreys"/><ref name="Shoemaker">{{Cite book |last=Shoemaker |first=Stephen J. |title=The Death of a Prophet: The End of Muhammad's Life and the Beginnings of Islam |date= 2011-11-29 |publisher= University of Pennsylvania |isbn= 978-0-8122-0513-8 |language= en |doi=10.9783/9780812205138 |url= http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/14933.html |pages= 1–2 | quote= There are, it must be admitted, some considerable and undeniable flaws in Hagarism's reinterpretation of formative Islam, as even its most sympathetic readers have often acknowledged. Most significantly, Hagarism has been rightly criticized for its occasionally uncritical use of non-Islamic sources in reconstructing the origins of Islam. The imperfections of Hagarism should not lead us to discount completely the important insights that both this study and its approach have to offer. While some scholars have somewhat unfairly dismissed Hagarism and its approach as either hopelessly colonialist or methodologically flawed, there is still much to gain from this seminal book.}}</ref><ref name="MER"/> The book questioned prevailing assumptions about traditional sources, proposing new interpretations that opened avenues for research and discussion. It connected the history of early Islam to other areas, from Mediterranean ] to theories of ]. Following earlier critical work by ], ], and ], it challenged scholars to use a much wider methodology, including techniques already used in ].<ref name="Tannous"/> It is thus credited for provoking a major development of the field, even though it might be viewed more as a "what-if" experiment than as a research monograph.<ref name="Humphreys"/><ref name="van Ess"/> | |||
The term 'hagarism' refers to the way Muhammad justified the inclusion of the Arabs by emphasizing the common ancestry of the Jews and Arabs from ], through ] for the Jews and ] for the Arabs. Eventually the Arabs splintered off from the Jews, and Hagarism continued to develop into what is now Islam: a blend of ], ] and ]. In this light the mythology of Islam was born with the creation a century later of a holy text modelled on the Jewish ] - (the ]), and the fashioning a prophet like status for Muhammad based on ] and the assigning of a sacred city (Medina) again modelled on the Jewis holy city adjacent to a holy mountain . | |||
== |
==Synopsis== | ||
Cook and Crone postulate that "Hagarism" started as a "Jewish messianic movement" to "reestablish Judaism" in the Jewish Holyland (Palestine), that its adherents were first known as '']'' (migrants) rather than Muslims, and that their '']'' (migration) was to ] rather than ]. Its members were initially both Jewish and Arab but the Arabs' increasing success impelled them to break from the Jews around the time of ] in the late seventh century. They flirted with Christianity, learning a respect for Jesus as prophet and Mary as Virgin, before asserting an independent ] monotheist identity. This borrowed key concepts from the Jewish breakaway sect of ]: "the idea of a scripture limited to the ], a prophet like ] (]), a holy book revealed like the Torah (the ]), a sacred city (]) with a nearby mountain (]) and shrine (the ]) of an appropriate patriarch (]), plus a caliphate modeled on an ]."<ref name=OoIaCLatS2000>{{cite book |author=Ibn Warraq |author-link=Ibn Warraq |title=] |date=2000 |publisher=Prometheus |pages=95 |chapter=2. Origins of Islam: A Critical Look at the Sources}}</ref> | |||
], professor of the authors, reviewed the book, specifically the first part, in the ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies''. He begins by praising the book claming, "the authors; erudition is extrapordinary their industry everywhere evident, their prose ebullient". He concludes that their research, while good, was used by their methodology to make too gradiose an assumption: | |||
===Methodology=== | |||
:My reservations here, and elsewhere in this first part of the book, turn upon what I take to be the authors' methodological assumptions, of which the principal must be that a vocabulary of motives can be freely extrapolated from a discrete collection of literary stereotypes composed by alien and mostly hostile observers, and thereupon employed to describe, even interpret, not merely the overt behaviour but also intellectual and spiritual development of the helpless and mostly innocent actors. Where even the sociologist fears to tread, the historian ought not with impunity be permitted to go.<ref>]. "". ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'', University of London, Vol. 41, No. 1. (1978), pp. 155-156.</ref> | |||
''Hagarism'' begins with the premise that ] historical scholarship on the beginnings of ] should be based on contemporary historical, ] and ] data, as is done for the study of Judaism and Christianity, rather than Islamic traditions and later Arabic writings. The tradition expresses dogma, and gives historically irreconcilable and ] accounts of the community's past. By relying on contemporary historical, archaeological and ] evidence, stressing non-Muslim sources, the authors attempt to reconstruct and present what they argue is a more historically accurate account of Islam's origins. | |||
===The term ''Hagarism''=== | |||
Historian ] states: | |||
According to the authors, '']'' is a term used commonly by various sources (Greek {{transl|grc|Magaritai}}, Syriac {{transl|syr|Mahgre}} or {{transl|syr|Mahgraye}}) to describe the 7th-century Arab conquerors. The word was a self-designation of the early Muslim community with a double-meaning. Firstly, it is a cognate of {{transl|ar|]}}, an Arabic term for those who partake in {{transl|ar|]}} (exodus). Secondly, it refers to ]: descendants of ] through his handmaid ] and their child ], in the same way as the Jews claimed descent and their ancestral faith from Abraham through his wife ] and their child ]. Muhammad would have claimed such descent for Arabs to give them a birthright to the ] and to prepend a monotheist genealogy compatible with Judaism to their pagan ancestral practice (such as ] and ]). ''Hagarism'' thus refers to this early faith movement. The designation as ''Muslims'' and ''Islam'' would only come later, after the success of conquests made the duty of hijra obsolete.({{Page numbers|8-9}}) | |||
:In ''Hagarism'', a 1977 study by Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, the authors completely exclude the Arabic literary sources and reconstruct the early history of Islam only from the information to be found in Arabic papyri, coins, and inscriptions as well as non-Arabic literary sources in a wide array of languages (], ], ], ], ], ], and ]). This approach leads Crone and Cook in wild new directions. In their account, Mecca's role is replaced by a city in northwestern Arabia and Muhammad was elevated "to the role of a scriptural prophet" only about a.d. 700, or seventy years after his death. As for the ], it was compiled in Iraq at about that same late date."<ref>]. "". ''The Middle East Quarterly''. September 1999. Volume VI: Number 3.</ref> | |||
===Origins=== | |||
Eric Manheimer in ''The American Historical Review'' said he found the research to be thorough even if some terminology was confusing and concluded that "the conclusions drawn lack balance". The review was by no means all negative. He complimented their scrutiny of the source and agrees that most Islamic scholars believe that Islam borrowed from Jewish, Christian, and other traditions.<ref>Eric I. Manheimer. "". ''The American Historical Review'', Vol. 83, No. 1. (Feb., 1978), pp. 240-241.</ref> | |||
The authors, interpreting 7th century Syriac, Armenian and Hebrew sources, put forward the hypothesis that Muhammad was alive during the ] (about two years longer than ]; the caliphate of ] was hence a later invention). | |||
He led Jews and Hagarenes (Arabs) united under a faith loosely described as Judeo-Hagarism, as a prophet preaching the coming of a Judaic messiah who would redeem the ] from the ] ]. This redeemer came in the person of ], as suggested by the Aramaic origins of his epithet {{transl|ar|Al-Faruq}} (i.e. "the distinguisher "). | |||
The {{transl|ar|]}}, the defining idea and religious duty of Hagarenes, thus referred to the emigration from northern Arabia to Palestine (later more generally to conquered territories), not to a single exodus from Mecca to Medina (in particular, "no seventh-century source identifies the ] as that of the hijra"). Mecca was only a secondary sanctuary; the initial gathering of Hagarenes and Jews took place rather somewhere in north-west Arabia, north of Medina. | |||
While the full assertions of the book were not widely accepted, the attempts to deconstruct early Islamic history make this a groundbreaking and important work in early Islamic history. | |||
===Development=== | |||
==Quote from the book== | |||
After the successful conquest of the Holy Land, Hagarenes feared that being too influenced by Judaism might result in outright conversion and assimilation. | |||
In order to break with Jewish messianism, they recognised Jesus as messiah (though ]), which also served to soften the initially hostile attitude towards a growing numbers of Christian subjects. | |||
However, to form a distinct identity, not conflated with either Judaism or Christianity, ancestral practice was reframed as a distinct monotheistic Abrahamic religion. | |||
It took the ] scriptural position, defined as accepting the ] while rejecting prophets. | |||
This also served to undermine the legitimacy of the Davidic monarchy, which the Samaritans rejected, as well as the sanctity of Jerusalem. | |||
Instead, Samaritans had had their holy city in ] and a temple on the nearby ]; Mecca with its ] were contrived as a parallel of these. | |||
To combine the Abrahamic, Christian, and Samaritan elements, the role of Muhammad was recast as a prophet parallel to ], ]. The Quran was expeditiously collected from earlier disparate Hagarene writings, possibly heavily edited into its complete form by ] (that is, in the last decade of the 7th century rather than the middle, under ], as ]; see ]). | |||
*Virtually all accounts of the early development of Islam take it as axiomatic that it is possible to elicit at least the outlines of the process from the Islamic sources. It is however well-known that these sources are not demonstrably early. There is no hard evidence for the existence of the Koran in any form before the last decade of the seventh century, and the tradition which places this rather opaque revelation in its historical context is not attested before the middle of the eighth. The historicity of the Islamic tradition is thus to some degree problematic. | |||
The political theory of early Islam was based on two sources. The first was Samaritan high-priesthood, which joins political and religious authority and legitimises it on basis of religious knowledge and genealogy. Secondly, a resurgence of Judaic influences in Babylonian Iraq, which led to the reassertion of messianism in the form of ], especially in Shia Islam. | |||
==Apparent Repudiation== | |||
The identification as Hagarenes was replaced with the Samaritan notion of Islam (understood as submission or as a covenant of peace), its adherents becoming Muslims. | |||
Michael Cook and Patricia Crone no longer subscribe to the findings of this work. In a phone interview with Dr. Liaquat Ali Khan, Michael Cook says, "The central thesis of that book was, I now think, mistaken. Over the years, I have gradually come to think that the evidence we had to support the thesis was not sufficient or internally consistent enough." Patricia Crone's statements seem to corroborate with that of Cook's: "We were young, and we did not know anything. The book was just a hypothesis, not a conclusive finding," said Crone. "I do not think that the book's thesis is valid." <ref>{{cite web|url=http://baltimorechronicle.com/2006/042606AliKhan.shtml|title=Hagarism: The Story of a Book Written by Infidels for Infidels|accessdate=2006-06-09}}</ref> | |||
===Consolidation in Iraq=== | |||
== References == | |||
The transition to a confident, recognisably Islamic identity, with its various borrowings assimilated, occurred in the late 7th century, during the reign of ]. | |||
<references/> | |||
However, its evolution continued. | |||
As power was transferred from Syria to Iraq, Islam incorporated the rabbinical culture of ]: religious law practised by a learned laity and based on oral traditions. | |||
In the second half of the eighth century, the early ], simultaneously with ], rejected all oral traditions, leading to a failed attempt to base law on ]. In response, scholars followed ] in gathering chains of authorities (]s) to support traditions item by item. This original solution finalised the independence of Islam from Judaism. | |||
== See also == | |||
* ] | |||
Part I of the book ends by considering the peculiar state in which the Hagarenes found themselves: their own success pushed them away from the sanctuaries of Jerusalem and Mecca to Babylonia, as finalised by the ]; Umar had already lived and there was no lost land or freedom to hope for. This led Sunni religious politics into ] under a desanctified state, contrasted only with "Sufi resignation". | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Wider context=== | |||
{{islam-stub}}{{reli-book-stub}} | |||
{{Expand section|date=June 2019}} | |||
The remainder of the book, Parts II and III, discuss later developments and the larger context in which Islam originated: the Late Antique Near East, and relate it to theoretical themes of cultural history. | |||
This contrasts with the usual setting, focusing almost exclusively on Arabian indigenous polytheistic beliefs (]).<ref name="DonnerRev">{{Cite journal |last=Donner |first=Fred M. |date=2006 |title=Review of ''Hagarism'' |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23062875 |journal=Middle East Studies Association Bulletin |volume=40 |issue=2 |pages=197–199 |doi=10.1017/S0026318400049853 |issn=0026-3184 |jstor=23062875}} Middle East Studies Association Bulletin, Vol. 40, No. 2 (December 2006), pp. 197-199</ref> | |||
==Reception== | |||
The thesis of ''Hagarism'' is not widely accepted, although it won Crone praise for "erudition and lucid analysis."<ref name="MER">{{cite book | title = Political Islam: Essays from ] | chapter = The New Orientalism and the Democracy Debate |author-first=Yahya |author-last=Sadowski |editor-first=Joel |editor-last=Beinin |editor2-first=Joe |editor2-last=Stork | publisher = University of California Press | year=1997 |doi=10.1525/9780520917583 |page = 47 | isbn = 978-0-520-91758-3 | quote = This controversial thesis did not win wide acceptance, but it did gain respect for erudition and lucid analysis.}}</ref> Crone and Cook's work was part of ]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.scribd.com/document/306939990/Hagarism-Revisited-Bo-Holmberg-2004|title=Hagarism Revisited Bo Holmberg 2004 {{!}} Samaritans {{!}} Reality|website=Scribd|language=en|access-date=2017-04-04}}</ref> arising from several scholars associated with the ]'s ] (SOAS), beginning in the 1970s. They introduced methods from biblical studies as a new way of analyzing the history of the Koran and Islam, for instance, the use of contemporary texts in languages other than that used in the holy text, and incorporating evidence from archeology and linguistics. | |||
''Hagarism'' was acknowledged as raising some interesting questions and being a fresh approach in its reconstruction of early Islamic history, but it was described by ] as an experiment.<ref name="van Ess">van Ess, "The Making Of Islam", ''Times Literary Supplement,'' 8 September 1978, p. 998</ref> He argued that a “refutation is perhaps unnecessary since the authors make no effort to prove it (the hypothesis of the book) in detail ... Where they are only giving a new interpretation of well-known facts, this is not decisive. But where the accepted facts are consciously put upside down, their approach is disastrous."<ref name="van Ess" /> | |||
Jack Tannous, associate professor at ], called the book "brilliantly provocative" in 2011. He commented:<ref name="Tannous">{{Cite journal |last=Tannous |first=Jack |date=2011 |title=Review of Fred M. Donner, ''Muhammad and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam''|url=https://expositions.journals.villanova.edu/article/view/685/604 |format=pdf |journal=Expositions |language=en |volume=5 |issue=2 |issn=1747-5376}}</ref> {{quote|text= Apart from Internet enthusiasts and religiously-motivated polemicists, nobody today, not even Cook and Crone themselves, believes that the picture of early Islam put forth in ''Hagarism'' is an accurate one. But the legacy of ''Hagarism'' has endured, for in one thin little volume, Cook and Crone put their fingers on a nagging problem in an electric way. ... As a book making a specific argument, Hagarism was ultimately a failure, but in its stimulus of further research, writing, debate, and especially by challenging Islamicists to look beyond the confines of Arabic sources to the rich literatures of the Middle East that existed before, during, and after the rise of Islam, Hagarism was one of those rare books that changed a field.}} | |||
], professor at ], wrote in his analytic review of the ]:<ref name="Humphreys">{{Cite book |last=Humphreys |first=R. Stephen |author-link=R. Stephen Humphreys |title=Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry |chapter=Early historical tradition and the first Islamic polity |year=1992 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-21423-8 |doi=10.1515/9780691214238-005 |pages=84–85}}</ref> {{quote|text= Unsurprisingly, the Crone-Cook interpretation has failed to win general acceptance among Western Orientalists, let alone Muslim scholars. However, their approach does squarely confront the disparities between early Arabic tradition on the Conquest period and the accounts given by Eastern Christian and Jewish sources. The rhetoric of these authors may be an obstacle for many readers, for their argument is conveyed through a dizzying and unrelenting array of allusions, metaphors, and analogies. More substantively, their use (or abuse) of the Greek and Syriac sources has been sharply criticized. In the end, perhaps we ought to use Hagarism more as a 'what-if' exercise than as a research monograph, but it should not be ignored. |title=''Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry''}} | |||
David Waines, professor at ], states:<ref name="Waines">{{Cite book |last=Waines |first=David |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/an-introduction-to-islam/excursus-on-islamic-origins/BDF40C5FE48B8437EEA406E4D5E6CCCB |title=An Introduction to Islam |date=2003 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-53906-7 |edition=2 |chapter=Excursus on Islamic origins |page=307 |doi=10.1017/CBO9780511801037.012}}</ref> | |||
{{quote |text= The Crone-Cook theory has been almost universally rejected. The evidence offered by the authors is far too tentative and conjectural (and possibly contradictory) to conclude that Arab-Jewish relations were as intimate as they would wish them to have been. ... The book, nevertheless, has raised serious and legitimate questions by emphasizing the difficulty in employing the Muslim sources for a reconstruction of Islamic origins. | |||
|title=''An Introduction to Islam ''}} | |||
The journalist ] commented in '']'' that ''Hagarism'' was a notorious work, and that when it was published it "came under immediate attack, from Muslim and non-Muslim scholars alike, for its heavy reliance on hostile sources." He added that, "Crone and Cook have since backed away from some of its most radical propositions—such as, for example, that Muhammad lived two years longer than the Muslim tradition claims he did, and that the historicity of his migration to Medina is questionable."<ref name="what-atlantic-1999">{{cite journal |journal=Atlantic |last1=Lester |first1=Toby |date= January 1999 |title=What Is the Koran? | url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1999/01/what-is-the-koran/304024/ |accessdate=8 April 2019}}</ref> | |||
According to Liaquat Ali Khan who claimed to have interviewed ] and ], both of them would have later suggested that the central thesis of the book was mistaken because the evidence they had to support the thesis was not sufficient or internally consistent enough. Patricia Crone would have suggested to him that the book was “a graduate essay" and "a hypothesis," not "a conclusive finding", but they did nothing to acknowledge it publicly. Khan wrote that "Cook and Crone have made no manifest effort to repudiate their juvenile findings in the book. The authors admitted to me that they had not done it and cater no plans to do so."<ref>{{Cite web|title=Hagarism: The Story of a Book Written by Infidels for Infidels {{!}} BaltimoreChronicle.com|url=http://baltimorechronicle.com/2006/042606AliKhan.shtml|access-date=2020-08-19|website=baltimorechronicle.com}}</ref> | |||
=== Scholarly reviews === | |||
], who had mentored the authors, reviewed the book, specifically the first part. He begins by praising the book claiming, "the authors' erudition is extraordinary their industry everywhere evident, their prose ebullient." But, he says that "most, if not all, have been or can be challenged on suspicion of inauthenticity" and that "the material is upon occasion misleadingly represented ... My reservations here, and elsewhere in this first part of the book, turn upon what I take to be the authors' methodological assumptions, of which the principal must be that a vocabulary of motives can be freely extrapolated from a discrete collection of literary stereotypes composed by alien and mostly hostile observers, and thereupon employed to describe, even interpret, not merely the overt behaviour but also intellectual and spiritual development of the helpless and mostly innocent actors. Where even the sociologist fears to tread, the historian ought not with impunity be permitted to go."<ref name="Wansbrough">{{Cite journal |last=Wansbrough |first=J. |date=1978 |title=Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/615636 |journal=] |volume=41 |issue=1 |pages=155–156 |doi=10.1017/S0041977X00057918 |jstor=615636 |issn=0041-977X}}</ref> | |||
] wrote that ''Hagarism'' is "not only bitterly anti-Islamic in tone, but anti-Arabian. Its superficial fancies are so ridiculous that at first one wonders if it is just a 'leg pull', pure 'spoof'."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Serjeant |first=R. B. |date=1978 |title=Review of Quranic Studies: Sources and Methods of Scriptural Interpretation; Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/25210922 |journal=] |issue=1 |pages=76–78 |doi=10.1017/S0035869X00134264 |jstor=25210922 |issn=0035-869X}}</ref> | |||
Eric Manheimer commented that, "The research on Hagarism is thorough, but this reviewer feels that the conclusions drawn lack balance. The weights on the scales tip too easily toward the hypercritical side, tending to distract from what might have been an excellent study in comparative religion."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Manheimer |first=Eric I. |date=1978 |title=Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1866060 |journal=] |volume=83 |issue=1 |pages=240–241 |doi=10.2307/1866060 |jstor=1866060 |issn=0002-8762}}</ref> | |||
] described ''Hagarism'' as a "brilliant, fascinating, original, arrogant, highly debatable book" and writes that "the authors' fascination with lapidary formulas led them to cheap statements or to statements which require unusual intellectual gymnastics to comprehend and which become useless, at best cute" and that "... the whole construction proposed by the authors lacks entirely in truly historical foundations" but also praised the authors for trying to "relate the Muslim phenomenon to broad theories of acculturation and historical change."<ref name="Oleg">{{Cite journal |last=Grabar |first=Oleg |date=1978 |title=Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2849793 |journal=] |volume=53 |issue=4 |pages=795–799 |doi=10.2307/2849793 |jstor=2849793 |issn=0038-7134}}</ref> The classicist ] wrote in ''Apocalypse and/or Metamorphosis'' (1991) that ''Hagarism'', "illustrates in an ominous way the politics of Orientalism", and citing Grabar's review, added that, "The Western tradition of urbane condescension has degenerated into aggressive, unscrupulous even, calumny".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Norman Oliver |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IZVKbFRd9ckC |title=Apocalypse and/or metamorphosis |publisher=] |year=1991 |isbn=9780520072985 |location= |pages=68 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] remarked that "Despite a useful bibliography, this is a thin piece of {{lang|de|]}} full of glib generalizations, facile assumptions, and tiresome jargon. More argument than evidence, it suffers all the problems of intellectual history, including reification and logical traps."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Morony |first=Michael G. |date=1982 |title=Review of Hagarism |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/544677 |journal=] |volume=41 |issue=2 |pages=157–159 |doi=10.1086/372945 |jstor=544677 |issn=0022-2968}}</ref> | |||
], reviewing ''Hagarism'' in 2006, viewed the book as a "wake-up call": despite initial repudiation, it set a milestone by pointing out that scholars need to "consider a much more varied body of source material than most were used to using, or trained to use." On the other hand, he criticized the book's indiscriminate use of non-Muslim sources and the "labyrinthine" arguments incomprehensible even to many who had strong specialist training.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Donner |first=Fred M. |date=2006 |title=Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23062875 |journal=] |volume=40 |issue=2 |pages=197–199 |doi=10.1017/S0026318400049853 |jstor=23062875 |issn=0026-3184}}</ref> | |||
=== Follow-up work === | |||
] characterized ''Hagarism'' as evolving into a wider inter-disciplinary and literary approach, and said that additional studies would be published in the ''Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam'' (SLAEI Series) in which his book appears. Since then the "SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies"<ref>(SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies). Albany, NY, U.S.A.: State University of New York Press</ref> has also published a selection of authors who are continuing to produce work related to a modified form of this theory. | |||
==See also== | |||
*] | |||
*'']'' (''History of the Quran'')— book by ] | |||
*] — by ] | |||
*] | |||
*'']'' – a book by ], former student of Patricia Crone, providing an extensive collection of contemporary non-Muslim sources that give accounts of the formative period of Islam. | |||
*'']'' — a book by ] | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* Coster, Marije, "Hagarism", in Muhammad in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Prophet of God (2 vols.), Edited by C. Fitzpatrick and A. Walker, Santa Barbara, ABC-CLIO, 2014, Vol I, pp. 236–239. | |||
==External links== | |||
* | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hagarism: The Making Of The Islamic World}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 08:22, 4 January 2025
1977 book by Patricia Crone and Michael CookCover of the first edition | |
Authors | Patricia Crone Michael Cook |
---|---|
Language | English |
Subject | History of Islam |
Published | 1977 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover and Paperback) |
Pages | 277 |
ISBN | 978-0521297547 |
Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World is a 1977 book about the early history of Islam by the historians Patricia Crone and Michael Cook. Drawing on archaeological evidence and contemporary documents in Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic, Latin and Syriac, Crone and Cook depict an early Islam very different from the traditionally-accepted version derived from Muslim historical accounts.
According to the authors, "Hagarenes" was a term which near-contemporary sources used to name an Arab movement of the 7th century CE whose conquests and resultant caliphate were inspired by Jewish messianism. Crone and Cook contend that an alliance of Arabs and Jews sought to reclaim the Promised Land from the Byzantine Empire, that the Qur'an consists of 8th-century edits of various Judeo-Christian and other Middle-Eastern sources, and that Muhammad was the herald of Umar "the redeemer", a Judaic messiah.
The hypotheses proposed in Hagarism have been widely criticized, and by 2002, the authors themselves had admitted that a lot of their hypotheses were wrong. Nevertheless, the book has been hailed as a seminal work in its branch of Islamic historiography. The book questioned prevailing assumptions about traditional sources, proposing new interpretations that opened avenues for research and discussion. It connected the history of early Islam to other areas, from Mediterranean late antiquity to theories of acculturation. Following earlier critical work by Goldziher, Schacht, and Wansbrough, it challenged scholars to use a much wider methodology, including techniques already used in biblical studies. It is thus credited for provoking a major development of the field, even though it might be viewed more as a "what-if" experiment than as a research monograph.
Synopsis
Cook and Crone postulate that "Hagarism" started as a "Jewish messianic movement" to "reestablish Judaism" in the Jewish Holyland (Palestine), that its adherents were first known as muhajirun (migrants) rather than Muslims, and that their hijra (migration) was to Jerusalem rather than Medina. Its members were initially both Jewish and Arab but the Arabs' increasing success impelled them to break from the Jews around the time of Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan in the late seventh century. They flirted with Christianity, learning a respect for Jesus as prophet and Mary as Virgin, before asserting an independent Abrahamic monotheist identity. This borrowed key concepts from the Jewish breakaway sect of Samaritanism: "the idea of a scripture limited to the Pentateuch, a prophet like Moses (Muhammad), a holy book revealed like the Torah (the Quran), a sacred city (Mecca) with a nearby mountain (Jabal an-Nour) and shrine (the Kaaba) of an appropriate patriarch (Abraham), plus a caliphate modeled on an Aaronid priesthood."
Methodology
Hagarism begins with the premise that Western historical scholarship on the beginnings of Islam should be based on contemporary historical, archaeological and philological data, as is done for the study of Judaism and Christianity, rather than Islamic traditions and later Arabic writings. The tradition expresses dogma, and gives historically irreconcilable and anachronistic accounts of the community's past. By relying on contemporary historical, archaeological and philological evidence, stressing non-Muslim sources, the authors attempt to reconstruct and present what they argue is a more historically accurate account of Islam's origins.
The term Hagarism
According to the authors, Hagarenes is a term used commonly by various sources (Greek Magaritai, Syriac Mahgre or Mahgraye) to describe the 7th-century Arab conquerors. The word was a self-designation of the early Muslim community with a double-meaning. Firstly, it is a cognate of muhājirūn, an Arabic term for those who partake in hijra (exodus). Secondly, it refers to Ishmaelites: descendants of Abraham through his handmaid Hagar and their child Ishmael, in the same way as the Jews claimed descent and their ancestral faith from Abraham through his wife Sarah and their child Isaac. Muhammad would have claimed such descent for Arabs to give them a birthright to the Holy Land and to prepend a monotheist genealogy compatible with Judaism to their pagan ancestral practice (such as sacrifice and circumcision). Hagarism thus refers to this early faith movement. The designation as Muslims and Islam would only come later, after the success of conquests made the duty of hijra obsolete.(pp. 8-9)
Origins
The authors, interpreting 7th century Syriac, Armenian and Hebrew sources, put forward the hypothesis that Muhammad was alive during the conquest of Palestine (about two years longer than traditionally believed; the caliphate of Abu Bakr was hence a later invention). He led Jews and Hagarenes (Arabs) united under a faith loosely described as Judeo-Hagarism, as a prophet preaching the coming of a Judaic messiah who would redeem the Promised Land from the Christian Byzantines. This redeemer came in the person of Umar, as suggested by the Aramaic origins of his epithet Al-Faruq (i.e. "the distinguisher ").
The hijra, the defining idea and religious duty of Hagarenes, thus referred to the emigration from northern Arabia to Palestine (later more generally to conquered territories), not to a single exodus from Mecca to Medina (in particular, "no seventh-century source identifies the Arab era as that of the hijra"). Mecca was only a secondary sanctuary; the initial gathering of Hagarenes and Jews took place rather somewhere in north-west Arabia, north of Medina.
Development
After the successful conquest of the Holy Land, Hagarenes feared that being too influenced by Judaism might result in outright conversion and assimilation. In order to break with Jewish messianism, they recognised Jesus as messiah (though rejecting his crucifixion), which also served to soften the initially hostile attitude towards a growing numbers of Christian subjects. However, to form a distinct identity, not conflated with either Judaism or Christianity, ancestral practice was reframed as a distinct monotheistic Abrahamic religion. It took the Samaritan scriptural position, defined as accepting the Pentateuch while rejecting prophets. This also served to undermine the legitimacy of the Davidic monarchy, which the Samaritans rejected, as well as the sanctity of Jerusalem. Instead, Samaritans had had their holy city in Shechem and a temple on the nearby Mount Gerizim; Mecca with its nearby mountain were contrived as a parallel of these.
To combine the Abrahamic, Christian, and Samaritan elements, the role of Muhammad was recast as a prophet parallel to Moses, bringing a new scriptural revelation. The Quran was expeditiously collected from earlier disparate Hagarene writings, possibly heavily edited into its complete form by al-Hajjaj (that is, in the last decade of the 7th century rather than the middle, under Uthman, as traditionally believed; see Origin according to academic historians).
The political theory of early Islam was based on two sources. The first was Samaritan high-priesthood, which joins political and religious authority and legitimises it on basis of religious knowledge and genealogy. Secondly, a resurgence of Judaic influences in Babylonian Iraq, which led to the reassertion of messianism in the form of mahdism, especially in Shia Islam. The identification as Hagarenes was replaced with the Samaritan notion of Islam (understood as submission or as a covenant of peace), its adherents becoming Muslims.
Consolidation in Iraq
The transition to a confident, recognisably Islamic identity, with its various borrowings assimilated, occurred in the late 7th century, during the reign of Abd al-Malik. However, its evolution continued. As power was transferred from Syria to Iraq, Islam incorporated the rabbinical culture of Babylonian Judaism: religious law practised by a learned laity and based on oral traditions.
In the second half of the eighth century, the early Muʿtazila, simultaneously with Karaite Judaism, rejected all oral traditions, leading to a failed attempt to base law on Greek rationalism. In response, scholars followed Shafi'i in gathering chains of authorities (isnads) to support traditions item by item. This original solution finalised the independence of Islam from Judaism.
Part I of the book ends by considering the peculiar state in which the Hagarenes found themselves: their own success pushed them away from the sanctuaries of Jerusalem and Mecca to Babylonia, as finalised by the Abbasid Revolution; Umar had already lived and there was no lost land or freedom to hope for. This led Sunni religious politics into quietism under a desanctified state, contrasted only with "Sufi resignation".
Wider context
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The remainder of the book, Parts II and III, discuss later developments and the larger context in which Islam originated: the Late Antique Near East, and relate it to theoretical themes of cultural history. This contrasts with the usual setting, focusing almost exclusively on Arabian indigenous polytheistic beliefs (jahiliyya).
Reception
The thesis of Hagarism is not widely accepted, although it won Crone praise for "erudition and lucid analysis." Crone and Cook's work was part of revisionist history arising from several scholars associated with the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), beginning in the 1970s. They introduced methods from biblical studies as a new way of analyzing the history of the Koran and Islam, for instance, the use of contemporary texts in languages other than that used in the holy text, and incorporating evidence from archeology and linguistics.
Hagarism was acknowledged as raising some interesting questions and being a fresh approach in its reconstruction of early Islamic history, but it was described by Josef van Ess as an experiment. He argued that a “refutation is perhaps unnecessary since the authors make no effort to prove it (the hypothesis of the book) in detail ... Where they are only giving a new interpretation of well-known facts, this is not decisive. But where the accepted facts are consciously put upside down, their approach is disastrous."
Jack Tannous, associate professor at Princeton, called the book "brilliantly provocative" in 2011. He commented:
Apart from Internet enthusiasts and religiously-motivated polemicists, nobody today, not even Cook and Crone themselves, believes that the picture of early Islam put forth in Hagarism is an accurate one. But the legacy of Hagarism has endured, for in one thin little volume, Cook and Crone put their fingers on a nagging problem in an electric way. ... As a book making a specific argument, Hagarism was ultimately a failure, but in its stimulus of further research, writing, debate, and especially by challenging Islamicists to look beyond the confines of Arabic sources to the rich literatures of the Middle East that existed before, during, and after the rise of Islam, Hagarism was one of those rare books that changed a field.
Stephen Humphreys, professor at UCSB, wrote in his analytic review of the historiography of early Islam:
Unsurprisingly, the Crone-Cook interpretation has failed to win general acceptance among Western Orientalists, let alone Muslim scholars. However, their approach does squarely confront the disparities between early Arabic tradition on the Conquest period and the accounts given by Eastern Christian and Jewish sources. The rhetoric of these authors may be an obstacle for many readers, for their argument is conveyed through a dizzying and unrelenting array of allusions, metaphors, and analogies. More substantively, their use (or abuse) of the Greek and Syriac sources has been sharply criticized. In the end, perhaps we ought to use Hagarism more as a 'what-if' exercise than as a research monograph, but it should not be ignored.
— Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry
David Waines, professor at Lancaster University, states:
The Crone-Cook theory has been almost universally rejected. The evidence offered by the authors is far too tentative and conjectural (and possibly contradictory) to conclude that Arab-Jewish relations were as intimate as they would wish them to have been. ... The book, nevertheless, has raised serious and legitimate questions by emphasizing the difficulty in employing the Muslim sources for a reconstruction of Islamic origins.
— An Introduction to Islam
The journalist Toby Lester commented in The Atlantic that Hagarism was a notorious work, and that when it was published it "came under immediate attack, from Muslim and non-Muslim scholars alike, for its heavy reliance on hostile sources." He added that, "Crone and Cook have since backed away from some of its most radical propositions—such as, for example, that Muhammad lived two years longer than the Muslim tradition claims he did, and that the historicity of his migration to Medina is questionable."
According to Liaquat Ali Khan who claimed to have interviewed Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, both of them would have later suggested that the central thesis of the book was mistaken because the evidence they had to support the thesis was not sufficient or internally consistent enough. Patricia Crone would have suggested to him that the book was “a graduate essay" and "a hypothesis," not "a conclusive finding", but they did nothing to acknowledge it publicly. Khan wrote that "Cook and Crone have made no manifest effort to repudiate their juvenile findings in the book. The authors admitted to me that they had not done it and cater no plans to do so."
Scholarly reviews
John Wansbrough, who had mentored the authors, reviewed the book, specifically the first part. He begins by praising the book claiming, "the authors' erudition is extraordinary their industry everywhere evident, their prose ebullient." But, he says that "most, if not all, have been or can be challenged on suspicion of inauthenticity" and that "the material is upon occasion misleadingly represented ... My reservations here, and elsewhere in this first part of the book, turn upon what I take to be the authors' methodological assumptions, of which the principal must be that a vocabulary of motives can be freely extrapolated from a discrete collection of literary stereotypes composed by alien and mostly hostile observers, and thereupon employed to describe, even interpret, not merely the overt behaviour but also intellectual and spiritual development of the helpless and mostly innocent actors. Where even the sociologist fears to tread, the historian ought not with impunity be permitted to go."
Robert Bertram Serjeant wrote that Hagarism is "not only bitterly anti-Islamic in tone, but anti-Arabian. Its superficial fancies are so ridiculous that at first one wonders if it is just a 'leg pull', pure 'spoof'."
Eric Manheimer commented that, "The research on Hagarism is thorough, but this reviewer feels that the conclusions drawn lack balance. The weights on the scales tip too easily toward the hypercritical side, tending to distract from what might have been an excellent study in comparative religion."
Oleg Grabar described Hagarism as a "brilliant, fascinating, original, arrogant, highly debatable book" and writes that "the authors' fascination with lapidary formulas led them to cheap statements or to statements which require unusual intellectual gymnastics to comprehend and which become useless, at best cute" and that "... the whole construction proposed by the authors lacks entirely in truly historical foundations" but also praised the authors for trying to "relate the Muslim phenomenon to broad theories of acculturation and historical change." The classicist Norman O. Brown wrote in Apocalypse and/or Metamorphosis (1991) that Hagarism, "illustrates in an ominous way the politics of Orientalism", and citing Grabar's review, added that, "The Western tradition of urbane condescension has degenerated into aggressive, unscrupulous even, calumny".
Michael G. Morony remarked that "Despite a useful bibliography, this is a thin piece of Kulturgeschichte full of glib generalizations, facile assumptions, and tiresome jargon. More argument than evidence, it suffers all the problems of intellectual history, including reification and logical traps."
Fred Donner, reviewing Hagarism in 2006, viewed the book as a "wake-up call": despite initial repudiation, it set a milestone by pointing out that scholars need to "consider a much more varied body of source material than most were used to using, or trained to use." On the other hand, he criticized the book's indiscriminate use of non-Muslim sources and the "labyrinthine" arguments incomprehensible even to many who had strong specialist training.
Follow-up work
Robert G. Hoyland characterized Hagarism as evolving into a wider inter-disciplinary and literary approach, and said that additional studies would be published in the Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam (SLAEI Series) in which his book appears. Since then the "SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies" has also published a selection of authors who are continuing to produce work related to a modified form of this theory.
See also
- Historiography of early Islam
- Geschichte des Qorāns (History of the Quran)— book by Theodor Noldeke
- Muslim Studies (book) — by Ignaz Goldziher
- Revisionist school of Islamic studies
- Seeing Islam As Others Saw It – a book by Robert G. Hoyland, former student of Patricia Crone, providing an extensive collection of contemporary non-Muslim sources that give accounts of the formative period of Islam.
- What Did Muhammad Borrow from Judaism? — a book by Abraham Geiger
References
- Crone, Patricia; Cook, Michael (1977). Hagarism; The Making Of The Islamic World. London: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-21133-6.
- ^ Waines, David (2003). "Excursus on Islamic origins". An Introduction to Islam (2 ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 307. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511801037.012. ISBN 978-0-521-53906-7.
- ^ Humphreys, R. Stephen (1992). "Early historical tradition and the first Islamic polity". Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry. Princeton University Press. pp. 84–85. doi:10.1515/9780691214238-005. ISBN 978-0-691-21423-8.
- Gordon Newby (1988). A History of the Jews of Arabia. Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. p. 110.
The reconstructable past as presented in Hagarism relies only on sources outside of Islâm, and constructs a view of a past so as odds with conventional views that it has been almost universally rejected. This has been particularly so because the authors' criticisms of the possibilities of understanding the earliest periods of Islâm would seem, if applied as a general method to the sources used by historians of religion, to lead toward a kind of historical solipsism.
- ^ Tannous, Jack (2011). "Review of Fred M. Donner, Muhammad and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam" (pdf). Expositions. 5 (2). ISSN 1747-5376.
- Stille, Alexander (2 March 2002). "Scholars Are Quietly Offering New Theories of the Koran". The New York Times. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
Mr. Cook and Ms. Crone have revised some of their early hypotheses while sticking to others. We were certainly wrong about quite a lot of things, Ms. Crone said. But I stick to the basic point we made: that Islamic history did not arise as the classic tradition says it does.
- Khan, Liaquat Ali. "Hagarism: The Story of a Book Written by Infidels for Infidels". Baltimore Chronicle. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
- Shoemaker, Stephen J. (2011-11-29). The Death of a Prophet: The End of Muhammad's Life and the Beginnings of Islam. University of Pennsylvania. pp. 1–2. doi:10.9783/9780812205138. ISBN 978-0-8122-0513-8.
There are, it must be admitted, some considerable and undeniable flaws in Hagarism's reinterpretation of formative Islam, as even its most sympathetic readers have often acknowledged. Most significantly, Hagarism has been rightly criticized for its occasionally uncritical use of non-Islamic sources in reconstructing the origins of Islam. The imperfections of Hagarism should not lead us to discount completely the important insights that both this study and its approach have to offer. While some scholars have somewhat unfairly dismissed Hagarism and its approach as either hopelessly colonialist or methodologically flawed, there is still much to gain from this seminal book.
- ^ Sadowski, Yahya (1997). "The New Orientalism and the Democracy Debate". In Beinin, Joel; Stork, Joe (eds.). Political Islam: Essays from Middle East Report. University of California Press. p. 47. doi:10.1525/9780520917583. ISBN 978-0-520-91758-3.
This controversial thesis did not win wide acceptance, but it did gain respect for erudition and lucid analysis.
- ^ van Ess, "The Making Of Islam", Times Literary Supplement, 8 September 1978, p. 998
- Ibn Warraq (2000). "2. Origins of Islam: A Critical Look at the Sources". The Quest for the Historical Muhammad. Prometheus. p. 95.
- Donner, Fred M. (2006). "Review of Hagarism". Middle East Studies Association Bulletin. 40 (2): 197–199. doi:10.1017/S0026318400049853. ISSN 0026-3184. JSTOR 23062875. Middle East Studies Association Bulletin, Vol. 40, No. 2 (December 2006), pp. 197-199
- "Hagarism Revisited Bo Holmberg 2004 | Samaritans | Reality". Scribd. Retrieved 2017-04-04.
- Lester, Toby (January 1999). "What Is the Koran?". Atlantic. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
- "Hagarism: The Story of a Book Written by Infidels for Infidels | BaltimoreChronicle.com". baltimorechronicle.com. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- Wansbrough, J. (1978). "Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 41 (1): 155–156. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00057918. ISSN 0041-977X. JSTOR 615636.
- Serjeant, R. B. (1978). "Review of Quranic Studies: Sources and Methods of Scriptural Interpretation; Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1): 76–78. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00134264. ISSN 0035-869X. JSTOR 25210922.
- Manheimer, Eric I. (1978). "Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World". The American Historical Review. 83 (1): 240–241. doi:10.2307/1866060. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1866060.
- Grabar, Oleg (1978). "Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World". Speculum. 53 (4): 795–799. doi:10.2307/2849793. ISSN 0038-7134. JSTOR 2849793.
- Brown, Norman Oliver (1991). Apocalypse and/or metamorphosis. University of California Press. p. 68. ISBN 9780520072985.
- Morony, Michael G. (1982). "Review of Hagarism". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 41 (2): 157–159. doi:10.1086/372945. ISSN 0022-2968. JSTOR 544677.
- Donner, Fred M. (2006). "Review of Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World". Middle East Studies Association Bulletin. 40 (2): 197–199. doi:10.1017/S0026318400049853. ISSN 0026-3184. JSTOR 23062875.
- (SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies). Albany, NY, U.S.A.: State University of New York Press
Further reading
- Coster, Marije, "Hagarism", in Muhammad in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Prophet of God (2 vols.), Edited by C. Fitzpatrick and A. Walker, Santa Barbara, ABC-CLIO, 2014, Vol I, pp. 236–239.