Raffaele Mauriello
- Published in print:
- 2014
- Published Online:
- September 2015
- ISBN:
- 9780748644971
- eISBN:
- 9781474400831
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Edinburgh University Press
- DOI:
- 10.3366/edinburgh/9780748644971.003.0010
- Subject:
- Religion, Islam
This chapter examines how genealogy may be used for writing about the past by focusing on the family of the Prophet Muhammad and the evidence that genealogies provide regarding marriage alliances and ...
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This chapter examines how genealogy may be used for writing about the past by focusing on the family of the Prophet Muhammad and the evidence that genealogies provide regarding marriage alliances and strategies. In particular, it considers the question of endogamy, or marriage within the ‘family’. It shows that genealogical data are useful for writing the history of one branch of the Prophet's family, the al-Sadr, in today's Lebanon, Iraq, and Iran. The chapter begins with an overview of the al-Sadr family before turning to a discussion of the 'Alids' marriage strategy. Based on works of prosopography and extensive fieldwork, the chapter analyses sensitive data involving women of the Prophet's family to illustrate how this branch has followed a strategy of endogamy involving both the family and non-'Alid members of ‘the Shi'i religious establishment’. It also shows that the families with whom members of the al-Sadr family have established marriage bonds are very important for defining the social status of the al-Sadr.Less
This chapter examines how genealogy may be used for writing about the past by focusing on the family of the Prophet Muhammad and the evidence that genealogies provide regarding marriage alliances and strategies. In particular, it considers the question of endogamy, or marriage within the ‘family’. It shows that genealogical data are useful for writing the history of one branch of the Prophet's family, the al-Sadr, in today's Lebanon, Iraq, and Iran. The chapter begins with an overview of the al-Sadr family before turning to a discussion of the 'Alids' marriage strategy. Based on works of prosopography and extensive fieldwork, the chapter analyses sensitive data involving women of the Prophet's family to illustrate how this branch has followed a strategy of endogamy involving both the family and non-'Alid members of ‘the Shi'i religious establishment’. It also shows that the families with whom members of the al-Sadr family have established marriage bonds are very important for defining the social status of the al-Sadr.