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| #Post#: 4078-------------------------------------------------- | |
| The Crusades: An Arab Perspective Ep1 | |
| By: guest5 Date: February 9, 2021, 11:01 pm | |
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| Shock: The First Crusade and the Conquest of Jerusalem | The | |
| Crusades: An Arab Perspective Ep1 | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HProiNnmGwI | |
| #Post#: 4086-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Crusades: An Arab Perspective Ep1 | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: February 10, 2021, 2:35 am | |
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| On a related note, our enemies do our work for us in repeating | |
| (as I have previously stated) the relatively low sexism | |
| (contrary to popular stereotype) in the medieval Arabic world | |
| (though our enemies consider this a negative thing): | |
| https://incels.co/threads/reminder-arabs-were-more-cucked-than-whites-up-until-… | |
| [quote]Medieval Arabia and Islam VS Medieval Europe:​ | |
| Ignaz Goldziher predicted himself that perhaps as much as 15% of | |
| medieval hadith scholars were women. Note that this is against | |
| the Medieval European 0% women scholars. | |
| Ruth Roded writes that | |
| "In reading the biographies of thousands of Muslim women | |
| scholars, one is amazed at the evidence that contradicts the | |
| view of Muslim women as marginal, secluded, and restricted". | |
| ... | |
| Women were able to manage their financial affairs privately and | |
| separately from their husbands, and contract divorces. They | |
| could also grant inheritance and keep their surnames. And this | |
| is all under the traditional interpretation of sharia, not just | |
| a cherrypicking of examples from the most progressive classes of | |
| society. | |
| In 15th century Egypt, a very interesting survey was done of the | |
| marital history of 500 women, in which about a third of women | |
| married more than once, many because they had completed a | |
| divorce. | |
| This, for many many years in Europe, would have been unheard of. | |
| French laws didn�t remove restrictions like this until 1965, and | |
| significant problems arose in the Middle Eastern areas | |
| controlled by the British Empire, where the institution of | |
| common law stripped many women of their wealth and removed their | |
| legal identity entirely. | |
| ... | |
| THE FIRST EVER ISLAMIC THEOCRAT WAS A FEMALE AS WELL | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%27A%27isha_al-Ba%27uniyya[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 23028-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Crusades: An Arab Perspective Ep1 | |
| By: rp Date: October 24, 2023, 8:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://twitter.com/ragipsoylu/status/1715828481722814742?t=rrgv-EFBmfKDGyaMP_d… | |
| />(video at link): | |
| [Quote] | |
| Turkey�s public broadcaster will screen a locally produced TV | |
| drama on Saladin, who captured Jerusalem after defeating the | |
| Crusaders in 1187 | |
| TRT promo: | |
| "Justice for the world, freedom for Jerusalem! | |
| The story of Saladin who saved the holy city of Jerusalem from | |
| occupation centuries ago...� | |
| �Jerusalem is a matter of morality and justice. History bears | |
| witness to times of prosperity. To realize�� | |
| [/Quote] | |
| #Post#: 24808-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Islamic Caliphate | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: January 13, 2024, 3:03 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Our enemy's view on Islamic Autocracy | |
| [quote]As Europe descended into religious war, some Western | |
| writers began to appreciate the relative tranquility and | |
| prosperity of Ottoman lands and to wonder whether Turkish | |
| autocracy was superior to Western royal and republican | |
| governments. They noted with unease the numerous Christians | |
| fleeing to Ottoman lands to escape religious civil wars, some of | |
| whom even converted to Islam. The Sultan, after all, allowed | |
| people of different faiths to practice their religions without | |
| molestation, whereas toleration of any kind was hard to find in | |
| Europe. Western humanists had long been critical of legal | |
| pettifoggery and endless delays in resolving cases in Western | |
| courts, but the Ottomans seemed to be able to deliver justice | |
| that was both swift and fair. Western governments were | |
| ineffective in part because royal power was shared with nobles | |
| and other intermediate and subordinate powers whose interests | |
| diverged from those of the crown. By contrast the Ottomans, some | |
| Western observers believed, had a meritocratic system where | |
| officials were appointed by the sultan on the basis of their | |
| virtue and accomplishments, not their noble descent. Such | |
| officials were not in a position to place their private | |
| interests before that of the empire, and their loyal service | |
| made Ottoman government the best in the world. | |
| ... | |
| More important for the history of Western political thought, | |
| however, was the concept of �oriental despotism� that first | |
| emerged in the sixteenth century. It became a major analytical | |
| category in Montesquieu�s De l�esprit des lois, the most | |
| important treatise on politics of the eighteenth century (and a | |
| major influence on the American Founding Fathers). According to | |
| Malcolm, who devotes three chapters to discussing its evolution, | |
| the concept of oriental despotism had its roots in Aristotle�s | |
| Politics, where its theoretical role was marginal, but it was | |
| �revived and developed specifically in order to describe the | |
| power wielded� by the Ottoman sultans. Despotism for Aristotle | |
| differed from tyranny in that tyrants used armed force to | |
| exercise arbitrary rule over free men, while despots commanded | |
| their subjects as masters commanded slaves. | |
| It was Luther�s learned follower, Philip Melanchthon, who first | |
| associated despotism with the Ottomans in his commentary on the | |
| Politics (1530). ... The Ottoman Empire was peaceful, but its | |
| peace came from subjects too slavish and terror-stricken to | |
| disobey their rulers. The sultan allowed no rivals to his power | |
| and thus ruled through officials rather than a hereditary | |
| nobility. The great men of his kingdom had no independent | |
| political rights. Unlike the absolute sovereign described by | |
| Bodin, the Sovereign of the Sublime House of Osman regarded the | |
| property of his subjects as his own. He discouraged letters and | |
| sciences as such studies tended to make men independent and gave | |
| them dignity. �Ignorance,� wrote one Spanish diplomat, �is the | |
| main foundation of the Ottoman Empire.�[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Posted on November 19, 2019 Thinking About the Ottoman Threat | |
| James Hankings, The New Criterion, November 2019 | |
| https://www.amren.com/news/2019/11/useful-enemies-noel-malcolm-ottoman-empire-c… | |
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