Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development

This is a study dealing with the origins and early development of Early Umayyad Syria to the early 660s, including a description of Syria at the end of the preceding period. Late Roman Syria's continuing material prosperity, despite the ravages of plague and Persian invasion, is emphasized. Imp...

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Main Author: O'Sullivan, Shaun
Other Authors: Kennedy, Hugh
Published: University of St Andrews 2003
Subjects:
950
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.496420
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4964202015-05-02T03:18:57ZEarly Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early developmentO'Sullivan, ShaunKennedy, Hugh2003This is a study dealing with the origins and early development of Early Umayyad Syria to the early 660s, including a description of Syria at the end of the preceding period. Late Roman Syria's continuing material prosperity, despite the ravages of plague and Persian invasion, is emphasized. Importance is also placed upon the deep-seated religious divisions among Christians, particularly those within the majority Chalcedonian community. The study examines the probable extent of social change in Syria brought about by the Islamic Conquest and Muslim Arab settlement, arguing that the administration of post-Conquest Syria owed relatively little to its predecessor. It goes on to discuss distinguishing characteristics of the Early Umayyad State, particularly its fiscal policy and military activities. It argues that the average tax rate imposed upon the non-Muslim population of Syria was soon raised substantially over Late Roman levels, proposing, in addition, that the wars fought by the Early Umayyad State to the early 660s, both external and internal, had significantly wider dimensions than are generally estimated. The religious divisions among Syrian Christians, previously considered, are examined more closely with regard to the Early Umayyad period; the study attempts to demonstrate that the Monothelete crisis and Islamic State policy combined to produce a formal division among Chalcedonians in Syria between Dyotheletes and Monotheletes during the 650s. Finally, it examines the significance of apocalyptic literature produced by eastern Christians during this period, particularly, it is argued, the Melkite community in Syria.950DS97.2O8University of St Andrewshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.496420http://hdl.handle.net/10023/6484Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 950
DS97.2O8
spellingShingle 950
DS97.2O8
O'Sullivan, Shaun
Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
description This is a study dealing with the origins and early development of Early Umayyad Syria to the early 660s, including a description of Syria at the end of the preceding period. Late Roman Syria's continuing material prosperity, despite the ravages of plague and Persian invasion, is emphasized. Importance is also placed upon the deep-seated religious divisions among Christians, particularly those within the majority Chalcedonian community. The study examines the probable extent of social change in Syria brought about by the Islamic Conquest and Muslim Arab settlement, arguing that the administration of post-Conquest Syria owed relatively little to its predecessor. It goes on to discuss distinguishing characteristics of the Early Umayyad State, particularly its fiscal policy and military activities. It argues that the average tax rate imposed upon the non-Muslim population of Syria was soon raised substantially over Late Roman levels, proposing, in addition, that the wars fought by the Early Umayyad State to the early 660s, both external and internal, had significantly wider dimensions than are generally estimated. The religious divisions among Syrian Christians, previously considered, are examined more closely with regard to the Early Umayyad period; the study attempts to demonstrate that the Monothelete crisis and Islamic State policy combined to produce a formal division among Chalcedonians in Syria between Dyotheletes and Monotheletes during the 650s. Finally, it examines the significance of apocalyptic literature produced by eastern Christians during this period, particularly, it is argued, the Melkite community in Syria.
author2 Kennedy, Hugh
author_facet Kennedy, Hugh
O'Sullivan, Shaun
author O'Sullivan, Shaun
author_sort O'Sullivan, Shaun
title Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
title_short Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
title_full Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
title_fullStr Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
title_full_unstemmed Early Umayyad Syria : a study of its origins and early development
title_sort early umayyad syria : a study of its origins and early development
publisher University of St Andrews
publishDate 2003
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.496420
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