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Ibn Khaldun

Ibn Khaldun (/ˈɪbən xælˈdn/; Arabic: أبو زيد عبد الرحمن بن محمد بن خلدون الحضرمي, Abū Zayd ‘Abd ar-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad ibn Khaldūn al-Ḥaḍramī; 27 May 1332 – 17 March 1406, 732-808 AH) was an Arab[10] sociologist, philosopher, and historian[11][12] widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest social scientists of the Middle Ages,[13] and considered by many to be the father of historiography, sociology, economics, and demography studies.[14][15][note 1][16][note 2]

Ibn Khaldun
Bust of Ibn Khaldun in the entrance of the Kasbah of Bejaia, Algeria
Personal
Born27 May 1332
Died17 March 1406 (1406-03-18) (aged 73)
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni[1]
JurisprudenceMaliki[2]
CreedAsh'ari[3][4]
Main interest(s)
Notable idea(s)
Muslim leader
Influenced by

His best-known book, the Muqaddimah or Prolegomena ("Introduction"), which he wrote in six months as he states in his autobiography,[17] influenced 17th-century and 19th-century Ottoman historians such as Kâtip Çelebi, Mustafa Naima and Ahmed Cevdet Pasha, who used its theories to analyze the growth and decline of the Ottoman Empire.[18] Ibn Khaldun interacted with Tamerlane, the founder of the Timurid Empire.

Recently, Ibn Khaldun's works have been compared with those of influential European philosophers such as Niccolò Machiavelli, Giambattista Vico, David Hume, G. W. F. Hegel, Karl Marx, and Auguste Comte as well as the economists David Ricardo and Adam Smith, suggesting that their ideas found precedent (although not direct influence) in his. He has also been influential on certain modern Islamic thinkers (e.g. those of the traditionalist school), as well as on Reaganomics.

Family

 
Ibn Khaldun – Life-size bronze bust sculpture of Ibn Khaldun that is part of the collection at the Arab American National Museum (Catalog Number 2010.02). Commissioned by The Tunisian Community Center and Created by Patrick Morelli of Albany, NY in 2009. It was inspired by the statue of Ibn Khaldun erected at the Avenue Habib Bourguiba in Tunis.[19]

Ibn Khaldun's life is relatively well-documented, as he wrote an autobiography (التعريف بابن خلدون ورحلته غربا وشرقا, at-Taʻrīf bi-ibn Khaldūn wa-Riḥlatih Gharban wa-Sharqan[20]) ("Presenting Ibn Khaldun and his Journey West and East") in which numerous documents regarding his life are quoted word-for-word.

Abdurahman bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Al-Hasan bin Jabir bin Muhammad bin Ibrahim bin Abdurahman bin Ibn Khaldun al-Hadrami, generally known as "Ibn Khaldūn" after a remote ancestor, was born in Tunis in AD 1332 (732 AH) into an upper-class Andalusian family of Arab descent,[10] the family's ancestor was a Hadhrami who shared kinship with Waíl ibn Hujr, a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. His family, which held many high offices in Al-Andalus, had emigrated to Tunisia after the fall of Seville to the Reconquista in AD 1248. Although some of his family members had held political office in the Tunisian Hafsid dynasty, his father and grandfather later withdrew from political life and joined a mystical order. His brother, Yahya Khaldun, was also a historian who wrote a book on the Abdalwadid dynasty and was assassinated by a rival for being the official historiographer of the court.[21]

In his autobiography, Khaldun traces his descent back to the time of Muhammad through an Arab tribe from the south of the Arabian Peninsula, specifically the Hadhramaut, which came to the Iberian Peninsula in the 8th century, at the beginning of the Islamic conquest: "And our ancestry is from Hadhramaut, from the Arabs of Arabian Peninsula, via Wa'il ibn Hujr also known as Hujr ibn 'Adi, from the best of the Arabs, well-known and respected." (p. 2429, Al-Waraq's edition).

However, the modern biographer Mohammad Enan emphasised the unclear origins of Ibn Khaldun relying on the fact that Ibn Khaldun's criticism of Arabs might be a valid reason to cast doubt on his Arab origin. On the other hand, Ibn Khaldun's insistence and attachment to his claim of Arab ancestry at a time of Berber dynasties domination is also a valid reason to believe his claim.[22][23]

Education

His family's high rank enabled Ibn Khaldun to study with prominent teachers in Maghreb. He received a classical Islamic education, studying the Quran, which he memorized by heart, Arabic linguistics; the basis for understanding the Qur'an, hadith, sharia (law) and fiqh (jurisprudence). He received certification (ijazah) for all of those subjects.[24] The mathematician and philosopher Al-Abili of Tlemcen introduced him to mathematics, logic and philosophy, and he studied especially the works of Averroes, Avicenna, Razi and Tusi. At the age of 17, Ibn Khaldūn lost both his parents to the Black Death, an intercontinental epidemic of the plague that hit Tunis in 1348–1349.[25]

Following family tradition, he strove for a political career. In the face of a tumultuous political situation in North Africa, that required a high degree of skill in developing and dropping alliances prudently to avoid falling with the short-lived regimes of the time.[26] Ibn Khaldūn's autobiography is the story of an adventure, in which he spends time in prison, reaches the highest offices and falls again into exile.

Political career

 
Birth home of Ibn Khaldun at Tunis
 
The mosque in which Ibn Khaldun studied

At the age of 20, he began his political career in the chancellery of the Tunisian ruler Ibn Tafrakin with the position of Kātib al-'Alāmah (seal-bearer),[27] which consisted of writing in fine calligraphy the typical introductory notes of official documents. In 1352, Abū Ziad, the sultan of Constantine, marched on Tunis and defeated it. Ibn Khaldūn, in any case unhappy with his respected but politically meaningless position, followed his teacher Abili to Fez. There, the Marinid sultan, Abū Inan Fares I, appointed him as a writer of royal proclamations, but Ibn Khaldūn still schemed against his employer, which, in 1357, got the 25-year-old a 22-month prison sentence. Upon the death of Abū Inan in 1358, Vizier al-Hasān ibn-Umar granted him freedom and reinstated him to his rank and offices. Ibn Khaldūn then schemed against Abū Inan's successor, Abū Salem Ibrahim III, with Abū Salem's exiled uncle, Abū Salem. When Abū Salem came to power, he gave Ibn Khaldūn a ministerial position, the first position to correspond with Ibn Khaldūn's ambitions.

The treatment that Ibn Khaldun received after the fall of Abū Salem through Ibn-Amar ʻAbdullah, a friend of Ibn Khaldūn's, was not to his liking, as he received no significant official position. At the same time, Amar successfully prevented Ibn Khaldūn, whose political skills he knew well, from allying with the Abd al-Wadids in Tlemcen. Ibn Khaldūn, therefore, decided to move to Granada. He could be sure of a positive welcome there since at Fez, he had helped the Sultan of Granada, the Nasrid Muhammad V, regain power from his temporary exile. In 1364, Muhammad entrusted him with a diplomatic mission to the king of Castile, Pedro the Cruel, to endorse a peace treaty. Ibn Khaldūn successfully carried out this mission and politely declined Pedro's offer to remain at his court and have his family's Spanish possessions returned to him.

In Granada, Ibn Khaldūn quickly came into competition with Muhammad's vizier, Ibn al-Khatib, who viewed the close relationship between Muhammad and Ibn Khaldūn with increasing mistrust. Ibn Khaldūn tried to shape the young Muhammad into his ideal of a wise ruler, an enterprise that Ibn al-Khatib thought foolish and a danger to peace in the country. History proved al-Khatib right, and at his instigation, Ibn Khaldūn was eventually sent back to North Africa. Al-Khatib himself was later accused by Muhammad of having unorthodox philosophical views and murdered despite an attempt by Ibn Khaldūn to intercede on behalf of his old rival.

In his autobiography, Ibn Khaldūn tells little about his conflict with Ibn al-Khatib and the reasons for his departure. Orientalist Muhsin Mahdi interprets that as showing that Ibn Khaldūn later realised that he had completely misjudged Muhammad V.

Back in Ifriqiya, the Hafsid sultan of Bougie, Abū ʻAbdallāh, who had been his companion in prison, received him with great enthusiasm and made Ibn Khaldūn his prime minister. Ibn Khaldūn carried out a daring mission to collect taxes among the local Berber tribes. After the death of Abū ʻAbdallāh in 1366, Ibn Khaldūn changed sides once again and allied himself with the Sultan of Tlemcen, Abū l-Abbas. A few years later, he was taken prisoner by Abu Faris Abdul Aziz, who had defeated the sultan of Tlemcen and seized the throne. He then entered a monastic establishment and occupied himself with scholastic duties until 1370. In that year, he was sent for to Tlemcen by the new sultan. After the death of ʻAbdu l-Azīz, he resided at Fez, enjoying the patronage and confidence of the regent.

Ibn Khaldūn's political skills and, above all, his good relationship with the wild Berber tribes were in high demand among the North African rulers, but he had begun to tire of politics and constantly switching allegiances. In 1375, he was sent by Abū Hammu, the ʻAbdu l Wadid Sultan of Tlemcen, on a mission to the Dawadida Arabs tribes of Biskra. After his return to the West, Ibn Khaldūn sought refuge with one of the Berber tribes in the west of Algeria, in the town of Qalat Ibn Salama. He lived there for over three years under their protection, taking advantage of his seclusion to write the Muqaddimah "Prolegomena", the introduction to his planned history of the world. In Ibn Salama, however, he lacked the necessary texts to complete the work.[28] Therefore, in 1378, he returned to his native Tunis, which had meanwhile been conquered by Abū l-Abbas, who took Ibn Khaldūn back into his service. There, he devoted himself almost exclusively to his studies and completed his history of the world. His relationship with Abū l-Abbas remained strained, as the latter questioned his loyalty. That was brought into sharp contrast after Ibn Khaldūn presented him with a copy of the completed history that omitted the usual panegyric to the ruler. Under pretence of going on the Hajj to Mecca, something for which a Muslim ruler could not simply refuse permission, Ibn Khaldūn was able to leave Tunis and to sail to Alexandria.

Later life

 
Ibn Khaldun Statue and Square, Mohandessin, Cairo

Ibn Khaldun said of Egypt, "He who has not seen it does not know the power of Islam."[29] While other Islamic regions had to cope with border wars and inner strife, Mamluk Egypt enjoyed prosperity and high culture. In 1384, the Egyptian Sultan, al-Malik udh-Dhahir Barquq, made Khaldun professor of the Qamhiyyah Madrasah and appointed him as the Grand qadi of the Maliki school of fiqh (one of four schools, the Maliki school was widespread primarily in Western Africa). His efforts at reform encountered resistance, however, and within a year, he had to resign his judgeship. Also in 1384, a ship carrying Khaldun's wife and children sank off of Alexandria.

After his return from a pilgrimage to Mecca in May 1388, Ibn Khaldūn concentrated on teaching at various Cairo madrasas. At the Mamluk court he fell from favor because during revolts against Barquq, he had, apparently under duress, with other Cairo jurists, issued a fatwa against Barquq. Later relations with Barquq returned to normal, and he was once again named the Maliki qadi. Altogether, he was called six times to that high office, which, for various reasons, he never held long.

In 1401, under Barquq's successor, his son Faraj, Ibn Khaldūn took part in a military campaign against the Mongol conqueror, Timur, who besieged Damascus in 1400. Ibn Khaldūn cast doubt upon the viability of the venture and really wanted to stay in Egypt. His doubts were vindicated, as the young and inexperienced Faraj, concerned about a revolt in Egypt, left his army to its own devices in Syria and hurried home. Ibn Khaldūn remained at the besieged city for seven weeks, being lowered over the city wall by ropes to negotiate with Timur, in a historic series of meetings that he reported extensively in his autobiography.[30] Timur questioned him in detail about conditions in the lands of the Maghreb. At his request, Ibn Khaldūn even wrote a long report about it. As he recognized Timur's intentions, he did not hesitate, on his return to Egypt, to compose an equally-extensive report on the history of the Tatars, together with a character study of Timur, sending them to the Merinid rulers in Fez (Maghreb).

Ibn Khaldūn spent the next five years in Cairo completing his autobiography and his history of the world and acting as teacher and judge. Meanwhile, he was alleged to have joined an underground party, Rijal Hawa Rijal, whose reform-oriented ideals attracted the attention of local political authorities. The elderly Ibn Khaldun was placed under arrest. He died on 17 March 1406, one month after his sixth selection for the office of the Maliki qadi (Judge).

Works

 
Handwriting of Ibn Khaldūn certifying a manuscript copy of al-Muqaddima, MS Atif Efendi [ar] 1936, f. 7a

al-Muqaddima and the rest of Kitāb al-ʻIbar

  • Kitāb al-ʻIbar, (full title: Kitāb al-ʻIbar wa-Dīwān al-Mubtadaʼ wa-l-Khabar fī Taʼrīkh al-ʻArab wa-l-Barbar wa-Man ʻĀṣarahum min Dhawī ash-Shaʼn al-Akbār "Book of Lessons, Record of Beginnings and Events in the History of the Arabs and the Berbers and Their Powerful Contemporaries"); begun as a history of the Berbers and expanded to a universal history in seven books.[31][32]
Book 1; Al-Muqaddima ('The Introduction'), a socio-economic-geographical universal history of empires, and the best known of his works.[33]
Books 2–5; World History up to the author's own time.
Books 6–7; Historiography of the Berbers and the Maghreb. Khaldun departs from the classical style of Arab historians[note 3] by synthesising multiple, sometimes contradictory, sources without citations.[34] He reproduces some errors originating probably from his 14th-century Fez source, the work Rawḍ al-Qirṭās by Ibn Abi Zar, yet Al-'Ibar remains an invaluable source of Berber history.
Businesses owned by responsible and organized merchants shall eventually surpass those owned by wealthy rulers.[35]
Ibn Khaldun on economic growth and the ideals of Platonism

Concerning the discipline of sociology, he described the dichotomy of sedentary life versus nomadic life as well as the inevitable loss of power that occurs when warriors conquer a city. According to the Arab scholar Sati' al-Husri, the Muqaddimah may be read as a sociological work. The work is based around Ibn Khaldun's central concept of 'aṣabiyyah, which has been translated as "social cohesion", "group solidarity", or "tribalism". This social cohesion arises spontaneously in tribes and other small kinship groups; it can be intensified and enlarged by a religious ideology. Ibn Khaldun's analysis looks at how this cohesion carries groups to power but contains within itself the seeds – psychological, sociological, economic, political – of the group's downfall, to be replaced by a new group, dynasty or empire bound by a stronger (or at least younger and more vigorous) cohesion. Some of Ibn Khaldun's views, particularly those concerning the Zanj people of sub-Saharan Africa,[36] have been cited as racist,[37] though they were not uncommon for their time. According to the scholar Abdelmajid Hannoum, Ibn Khaldun's description of the distinctions between Berbers and Arabs were misinterpreted by the translator William McGuckin de Slane, who wrongly inserted a "racial ideology that sets Arabs and Berbers apart and in opposition" into his translation of part of`Ibar translated under the title Histoire des Berbères.[38]

Perhaps the most frequently cited observation drawn from Ibn Khaldūn's work is the notion that when a society becomes a great civilization, its high point is followed by a period of decay. This means that the next cohesive group that conquers the diminished civilization is, by comparison, a group of barbarians. Once the barbarians solidify their control over the conquered society, however, they become attracted to its more refined aspects, such as literacy and arts, and either assimilate into or appropriate such cultural practices. Then, eventually, the former barbarians will be conquered by a new set of barbarians, who will repeat the process.

Georgetown University Professor Ibrahim Oweiss, an economist and historian, argues that Ibn Khaldun was a major forerunner of modern economists and, in particular, originated the labor theory of value long before better known proponents such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo, although Khaldun did not refer to it as either a labor theory of value or theory.[39]

Ibn Khaldun also called for the creation of a science to explain society and went on to outline these ideas in his major work, the Muqaddimah, which states that “Civilization and its well-being, as well as business prosperity, depend on productivity and people’s efforts in all directions in their own interest and profit”.[40]

Ibn Khaldun diverged from norms that Muslim historians followed and rejected their focus on the credibility of the transmitter and focused instead on the validity of the stories and encouraged critical thinking.[41]

Ibn Khaldun also outlines early theories of division of labor, taxes, scarcity, and economic growth.[42]

He argued that poverty was a result of the destruction of morality and human values. He also looked at what factors contribute to wealth, such as consumption, government, and investment. Khaldun also argued that poverty was not necessarily a result of poor financial decision-making but of external consequences and therefore the government should be involved in alleviating poverty. Researchers from Malaysia's Insaniah University College and Indonesia's Tazkia University College of Islamic Economics created a dynamics model based upon Ibn Khaldun's writings to measure poverty in the Muslim nations of South Asia and Southeast Asia.[43]

Ibn Khaldun also believed that the currency of an Islamic monetary system should have intrinsic value and therefore be made of gold and silver (such as the dirham). He emphasized that the weight and purity of these coins should be strictly followed: the weight of one dinar should be one mithqal (the weight of 72 grains of barley, roughly 4.25 grams) and the weight of 7 dinar should be equal to weight of 10 dirhams (7/10 of a mithqal or 2.96 grams).[44]

Ibn Khaldun's writings regarding the division of labor are often compared to Adam Smith's writings on the topic.

The individual being cannot by himself obtain all the necessities of life. All human beings must co-operate to that end in their civilization. But what is obtained by the cooperation of a group of human beings satisfies the need of a number many times greater than themselves. For instance, no one by himself can obtain the share of the wheat he needs for food. But when six or ten persons, including a smith and a carpenter to make the tools, and others who are in charge of the oxen, the ploughing of, the harvesting of the ripe grain, and all other agricultural activities, undertake to obtain their food and work toward that purpose either separately or collectively and thus obtain through their labour a certain amount of food, that amount will be food for a number of people many times their own. The combined labour produces more than the needs and necessities of the workers (Ibn Khaldun 1958, vol.II 271 -272)[45]

In every other art and manufacture, the effects of the division of labour are similar to what they are in this very trifling one [pin production]; though, in many of them, the labour can either be so much subdivided, nor reduced to so great a simplicity of operation. The division of labour, however, so far as it can be introduced, occasions, in every art, a proportionable increase of the productive powers of labour (Smith 1976a, vol. I, 13–24)[46]

Both Ibn Khaldun and Smith shared the idea that the division of labor is fundamental to economic growth, however, the motivations and context for such division differed between them. For Ibn Khaldun, asabiyyah or social solidarity was the underlying motive and context behind the division of labor; for Smith it was self-interest and the market economy.[47]

Social thought

Ibn Khaldun's epistemology attempted to reconcile mysticism with theology by dividing science into two different categories, the religious science that regards the sciences of the Qur'an and the non-religious science. He further classified the non-religious sciences into intellectual sciences such as logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, etc. and auxiliary sciences such as language, literature, poetry, etc. He also suggested that possibly more divisions will appear in the future with different societies. He tried to adapt to all possible societies’ cultural behavior and influence in education, economics and politics. Nonetheless, he didn't think that laws were chosen by just one leader or a small group of individual but mostly by the majority of the individuals of a society.[48]

To Ibn Khaldun, the state was a necessity of human society to restrain injustice within the society, but the state means is force, thus itself an injustice. All societies must have a state governing them in order to establish a society. He attempted to standardize the history of societies by identifying ubiquitous phenomena present in all societies. To him, civilization was a phenomenon that will be present as long as humans exist. He characterized the fulfillment of basic needs as the beginning of civilization. At the beginning, people will look for different ways of increasing productivity of basic needs and expansion will occur. Later the society starts becoming more sedentary and focuses more on crafting, arts and the more refined characteristics. By the end of a society, it will weaken, allowing another small group of individuals to come into control. The conquering group is described as an unsatisfied group within the society itself or a group of desert bandits that constantly attack other weaker or weakened societies.

In the Muqaddimah, his most important work, he discusses an introduction of philosophy to history in a general manner, based on observable patterns within a theoretical framework of known historical events of his time. He described the beginnings, development, cultural trends and the fall of all societies, leading to the rise of a new society which would then follow the same trends in a continuous cycle. Also, he recommended the best political approaches to develop a society according to his knowledge of history. He heavily emphasized that a good society would be one in which a tradition of education is deeply rooted in its culture.[27] Ibn Khaldun (1987) introduced the word asabiya (solidarity, group feeling, or group consciousness), to explain tribalism. The concept of asabiya has been translated as "social cohesion," "group solidarity," or "tribalism." This social cohesion arises spontaneously in tribes and other small kinship groups (Rashed,2017).

Ibn Khaldun believed that too much bureaucracy, such as taxes and legislations, would lead to the decline of a society, since it would constrain the development of more specialized labor (increase in scholars and development of different services). He believed that bureaucrats cannot understand the world of commerce and do not possess the same motivation as a businessman.[27]

In his work the Muqaddimah, Ibn Khaldun emphasizes human beings' faculty to think (fikr) as what determines human behavior and ubiquitous patterns. This faculty is also what inspires human beings to form into a social structure to co-operate in division of labor and organization. According to Zaid Ahmand in Epistemology and the Human Dimension in Urban Studies, the fikr faculty is the supporting pillar for all philosophical aspects of Ibn Khaldun's theory related to human beings’ spiritual, intellectual, physical, social and political tendencies.

Another important concept he emphasizes in his work is the mastery of crafts, habits and skills. This takes place after a society is established and according to Ibn Khaldun the level of achievement of a society can be determined by just analyzing these three concepts. A society in its earliest stages is nomadic and primarily concerned with survival, while a society at a later stage is sedentary, with greater achievement in crafts. A society with a sedentary culture and stable politics would be expected to have greater achievements in crafts and technology.[27]

Ibn Khaldun also emphasized in his epistemology the important aspect that educational tradition plays to ensure the new generations of a civilization continuously improve in the sciences and develop culture. Ibn Khaldun argued that without the strong establishment of an educational tradition, it would be very difficult for the new generations to maintain the achievements of the earlier generations, let alone improve them.

Another way to distinguish the achievement of a society would be the language of a society, since for him the most important element of a society would not be land, but the language spoken. He was surprised that many non-Arabs were really successful in the Arabic society, had good jobs and were well received by the community. "These people were non-Arab by descent, but they grew up among the Arabs who possessed the habit of Arabic," Ibn Khaldun once recalled, "[b]ecause of this, they were able to master Arabic so well that they cannot be surpassed."[49] He believed that the reason why non-Arabs were accepted as part of Arab society was due to their mastery of the Arabic language.

Advancements in literary works such as poems and prose were another way to distinguish the achievement of a civilization, but Ibn Khaldun believed that whenever the literary facet of a society reaches its highest levels it ceases to indicate societal achievements anymore, but is an embellishment of life. For logical sciences he established knowledge at its highest level as an increase of scholars and the quality of knowledge. For him the highest level of literary productions would be the manifestation of prose, poems and the artistic enrichment of a society.[50]

Minor works

From other sources we know of several other works, primarily composed during the time he spent in North Africa and Al-Andalus. His first book, Lubābu l-Muhassal, a commentary on the Islamic theology of Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, was written at the age of 19 under the supervision of his teacher al-Ābilī in Tunis. A work on Sufism, Shifā'u l-Sā'il, was composed around 1373 in Fes, Morocco. Whilst at the court of Muhammed V, Sultan of Granada, Ibn Khaldūn composed a work on logic, ʻallaqa li-s-Sulṭān.

Legacy

 
A Laffer Curve with a maximum revenue point at around a 70%, as estimated by Trabandt and Uhlig (2009).[51] Laffer cites Ibn Khaldun's observation that "at the beginning of the dynasty, taxation yields a large revenue from small assessments. At the end of the dynasty, taxation yields a small revenue from large assessments."[52][53]

Egypt

Ibn Khaldun's historical method had very few precedents or followers in his time. While Ibn Khaldun is known to have been a successful lecturer on jurisprudence within religious sciences, only very few of his students were aware of, and influenced by, his Muqaddimah.[54] One such student, Al-Maqrizi, praised the Muqaddimah, although some scholars have found his praise, and that of others, to be generally empty and lacking understanding of Ibn Khaldun's methods.[54]

Ibn Khaldun also faced primarily criticism from his contemporaries, particularly Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani. These criticisms included accusations of inadequate historical knowledge, an inaccurate title, disorganization, and a style resembling that of the prolific Arab literature writer, Al-Jahiz. Al-Asqalani also noted that Ibn Khaldun was not well-liked in Egypt because he opposed many respected traditions, including the traditional judicial dress, and suggested that this may have contributed to the reception of Ibn Khaldun's historical works.[54] The notable exception to this consensus was Ibn al-Azraq, a jurist who lived shortly after Ibn Khaldun and quoted heavily from the first and fourth books of the Kitab al-‘Ibar, in developing a work of mirrors for princes.[54]

Ottoman Empire

Ibn Khaldun's work found some recognition with Ottoman intellectuals in the 17th century. The first references to Ibn Khaldun in Ottoman writings appeared in the middle of the 17th century, with historians such as Kâtip Çelebi naming him as a great influence, while another Turkish Ottoman historian, Mustafa Naima, attempted to use Ibn Khaldun's cyclical theory of the rise and fall of empires to describe the Ottoman Empire.[54] Increasing perceptions of the decline of the Ottoman Empire also caused similar ideas to appear independently of Ibn Khaldun in the 16th century, and may explain some of the influence of his works.[54]

Europe

In Europe, Ibn Khaldun was first brought to the attention of the Western world in 1697, when a biography of him appeared in Barthélemy d'Herbelot de Molainville's Bibliothèque Orientale. However, some scholars believe that Ibn Khaldun's work may have first been introduced to Europe via Ibn Arabshah's biography of Tamerlane, translated to Latin, which covers a meeting between Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane.[55] According to Ibn Arabshah, during this meeting, Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane discussed the Maghrib in depth, as well as Tamerlane's genealogy and place in history.[56] Ibn Khaldun began gaining more attention from 1806, when Silvestre de Sacy's Chrestomathie Arabe included his biography together with a translation of parts of the Muqaddimah as the Prolegomena.[57] In 1816, de Sacy again published a biography with a more detailed description on the Prolegomena.[58] More details on and partial translations of the Prolegomena emerged over the years until the complete Arabic edition was published in 1858. Since then, the work of Ibn Khaldun has been extensively studied in the Western world with special interest.[59] Reynold A. Nicholson praised Ibn Khaldun as a uniquely brilliant Muslim sociologist, but discounted Khaldun's influence.[55] Spanish Philosopher José Ortega y Gasset viewed the conflicts of North Africa as a problem that stemmed from a lack of African thought, and praised Ibn Khaldun for making sense of the conflict by simplifying it to the relationship between the nomadic and sedentary modes of life.[55]

Modern historians

British historian Arnold J. Toynbee has called Ibn Khaldun's Muqaddimah "the greatest work of its kind."[60] Ernest Gellner, once a professor of philosophy and logic at the London School of Economics, considered Khaldun's definition of government[note 4] the best in the history of political theory.[61]

More moderate views on the scope of Ibn Khaldun's contributions have also emerged.

Arthur Laffer, for whom the Laffer curve is named, acknowledged that Ibn Khaldun's ideas, as well as others, precede his own work on that curve.[62]

Economist Paul Krugman described Ibn Khaldun as "a 14th-century Islamic philosopher who basically invented what we would now call the social sciences".[63]

19th century Scottish theologian and philosopher Robert Flint praised him strongly, "as a theorist of history he had no equal in any age or country until Vico appeared, more than three hundred years later. Plato, Aristotle, and Augustine were not his peers, and all others were unworthy of being even mentioned along with him". Ibn Khaldun's work on evolution of societies also influenced Egon Orowan, who termed the concept of socionomy.[64] While Ibn Khaldun's record-keeping is usually passed over in favor of recognizing his contributions to the science of history, Abderrahmane Lakhsassi wrote "No historian of the Maghreb since and particularly of the Berbers can do without his historical contribution."[65]

Public recognition

Public recognition of Ibn Khaldun has increased in recent years. In 2004, the Tunisian Community Center launched the first Ibn Khaldun Award to recognize a Tunisian/American high achiever whose work reflects Ibn Khaldun's ideas of kinship and solidarity. The Award was named after Ibn Khaldun for the convergence of his ideas with the organization's objectives and programs. In 2006, the Atlas Economic Research Foundation launched an annual essay contest[66] for students named in Ibn Khaldun's honor. The theme of the contest is "how individuals, think tanks, universities and entrepreneurs can influence government policies to allow the free market to flourish and improve the lives of its citizens based on Islamic teachings and traditions."[66] In 2006, Spain commemorated the 600th anniversary of the death of Ibn Khaldun by orchestrating an exhibit titled "Encounter of Civilizations: Ibn Khaldun."[67]

In 2007, İbn Haldun Üniversitesi has opened in Istanbul, Turkey to commemorate his name. The university promotes a policy of trilingualism. The languages in question are English, Modern Turkish, and Arabic and its emphasis is on teaching social sciences.

In 1981 U.S. President Ronald Reagan cited Ibn Khaldun as an influence on his supply-side economic policies, also known as Reaganomics. He paraphrased Ibn Khaldun, who said that "in the beginning of the dynasty, great tax revenues were gained from small assessments," and that "at the end of the dynasty, small tax revenues were gained from large assessments." Reagan said his goal is "trying to get down to the small assessments and the great revenues."[68]

The Iraqi Navy named a frigate after Ibn Khaldun.

Bibliography

  • Kitāb al-ʻIbar wa-Dīwān al-Mubtadaʼ wa-l-Khabar fī Taʼrīkh al-ʻArab wa-l-Barbar wa-Man ʻĀṣarahum min Dhawī ash-Shaʼn al-Akbār
  • Lubābu-l-Muhassal fee Uswoolu-d-Deen
  • Shifā'u-s-Sā'il
  • ʻAl-Laqaw li-s-Sulṭān
  • Ibn Khaldun. 1951 التعريف بإبن خلدون ورحلته غربا وشرقا Al-Taʻrīf bi Ibn-Khaldūn wa Riħlatuhu Għarbān wa Sharqān. Published by Muħammad ibn-Tāwīt at-Tanjī. Cairo (Autobiography in Arabic).
  • Ibn Khaldūn. 1958 The Muqaddimah : An introduction to history. Translated from the Arabic by Franz Rosenthal. 3 vols. New York: Princeton.
  • Ibn Khaldūn. 1967 The Muqaddimah : An introduction to history. Trans. Franz Rosenthal, ed. N.J. Dawood. (Abridged).
  • Ibn Khaldun, 1332–1406. 1905 'A Selection from the Prolegomena of Ibn Khaldūn'. Trans. Duncan Macdonald

See also

Notes

  1. ^
    • "...regarded by some Westerners as the true father of historiography and sociology".[69]
    • "Ibn Khaldun has been claimed the forerunner of a great number of European thinkers, mostly sociologists, historians, and philosophers".(Boulakia 1971)
    • "The founding father of Eastern Sociology".[70]
    • "This grand scheme to find a new science of society makes him the forerunner of many of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries system-builders such as Vico, Comte and Marx." "As one of the early founders of the social sciences...".[71]
  2. ^
    • "He is considered by some as a father of modern economics, or at least a major forerunner. The Western world recognizes Khaldun as the father of sociology but hesitates in recognizing him as a great economist who laid its very foundations. He was the first to systematically analyze the functioning of an economy, the importance of technology, specialization and foreign trade in economic surplus and the role of government and its stabilization policies to increase output and employment. Moreover, he dealt with the problem of optimum taxation, minimum government services, incentives, institutional framework, law and order, expectations, production, and the theory of value".Cosma, Sorinel (2009). "Ibn Khaldun's Economic Thinking". Ovidius University Annals of Economics (Ovidius University Press) XIV:52–57
  3. ^ For classical style of Arab historians see Ibrahim ibn ar-Raqīq (~d.1028) and al-Mālikī.
  4. ^ "an institution which prevents injustice other than such as it commits itself"

References

Citations

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  3. ^ Doniger, Wendy (1999). Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions. Merriam-Webstar Inc. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-87779-044-0.
  4. ^ a b c d e https://themaydan.com/2017/11/myth-intellectual-decline-response-shaykh-hamza-yusuf/ "Ibn Khaldun on Philosophy: After clarifying what was meant precisely by philosophy in the Islamic tradition, namely the various schools of peripatetic philosophy represented either by Ibn Rushd or Ibn Sina, it should be clear why Ibn Khaldun was opposed to them. His critique of philosophy is an Ash’ari critique, completely in line with the Ash’aris before him, including Ghazali and Fakhr al-din al-Razi, both of whom Ibn Khaldun recommends for those who wish to learn how to refute the philosophers"
  5. ^ Muqaddimah 2:272–73 quoted in Weiss (1995) p 30
  6. ^ Weiss 1995, p. 31 quotes Muqaddimah 2:276–78
  7. ^ Moss, Laurence S., ed. (1996). Joseph A. Schumpeter: Historian of Economics: Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought. Routledge. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-134-78530-8. Ibn Khaldun drited away from Al-Farabi's political idealism.
  8. ^ Shah, Muhammad Sultan. "Pre-Darwinian Muslim Scholars’ Views on Evolution." (2017).
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  10. ^ a b Savant, Sarah Bowen (2014). Genealogy and Knowledge in Muslim Societies: Understanding the Past. Edinburgh University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-7486-4497-1. Banu Khaldun al-Hadrami (Yemen, but not Qahtan), to which belonged the famous historian Ibn Khaldun. The family's ancestor was 'Uthman ibn Bakr ibn Khalid, called Khaldun, a Yemeni Arab among the conquerors who shared kinship with the Prophet's Companian Wa'il ibn Hujr and who settled first in Carmona and then in Seville. The Historical Muhammad, Irving M. Zeitlin, (Polity Press, 2007), p. 21; "It is, of course, Ibn Khaldun as an Arab here speaking, for he claims Arab descent through the male line.". The Arab World: Society, Culture, and State, Halim Barakat (University of California Press, 1993), p. 48;"The renowned Arab sociologist-historian Ibn Khaldun first interpreted Arab history in terms of badu versus hadar conflicts and struggles for power." Ibn Khaldun, M. Talbi, The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. III, ed. B. Lewis, V.L. Menage, C. Pellat, J. Schacht, (Brill, 1986), 825; "Ibn Khaldun was born in Tunis, on I Ramadan 732/27 May 1332, in an Arab family which came originally from the Hadramawt and had been settled at Seville since the beginning of the Muslim conquest...." Ibn Khaldun's Philosophy of History: A Study in the Philosophic Foundation of the Science of Culture, Muhsin Mahdi, Routledge; "His family claimed descent from a Yemenite tribe originating in Hadramawt" Issawi, Charles. "Ibn Khaldūn". Encyclopedia Britannica, 13 March 2021; "the greatest Arab historian", "the family claimed descent from Khaldūn, who was of South Arabian stock, and had come to Spain in the early years of the Arab conquest and settled in Carmona." Cheddadi, Abdesselam, “Ibn Khaldūn, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān”, Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE; "was one of the greatest Arab historians, a philosopher, and a sociologist"
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Sources

  • Fuad Baali. 2005 The science of human social organization : Conflicting views on Ibn Khaldun's (1332–1406) Ilm al-umran. Mellen studies in sociology. Lewiston/NY: Edwin Mellen Press.
  • Boulakia, Jean David C. (1971). "Ibn Khaldûn: A Fourteenth-Century Economist". Journal of Political Economy. 79 (5): 1105–1118. doi:10.1086/259818. JSTOR pss/1830276. S2CID 144078253.
  • Walter Fischel. 1967 Ibn Khaldun in Egypt : His public functions and his historical research, 1382–1406; a study in Islamic historiography. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Allen Fromherz. 2010 "Ibn Khaldun : Life and Times". Edinburgh University Press, 2010.
  • Ana Maria C. Minecan, 2012 "El vínculo comunitario y el poder en Ibn Jaldún" in José-Miguel Marinas (Ed.), Pensar lo político: Ensayos sobre comunidad y conflicto, Biblioteca Nueva, Madrid, 2012.
  • Mahmoud Rabi'. 1967 The political theory of Ibn Khaldun. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
  • Róbert Simon. 2002 Ibn Khaldūn : History as science and the patrimonial empire. Translated by Klára Pogátsa. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. Original edition, 1999.
  • Weiss, Dieter (1995). "Ibn Khaldun on Economic Transformation". International Journal of Middle East Studies. Cambridge University Press. 27 (1): 29–37. doi:10.1017/S0020743800061560. JSTOR 176185. S2CID 162022220.

Further reading

  • Malise Ruthven, "The Otherworldliness of Ibn Khaldun" (review of Robert Irwin, Ibn Khaldun: An Intellectual Biography, Princeton University Press, 2018, ISBN 9780691174662, 243 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXVI, no. 2 (7 February 2019), pp. 23–24, 26. "More than six centuries after Ibn Khaldun's death the modern world has much to learn from studying him. After the Muqaddima itself, Irwin's intellectual biography... is an excellent place to begin."

External links

English

Non-English

  • Multilingual tunisian academic web site on Ibn Khaldun
  • (in French)
  • (in Arabic)
  • Ismail Küpeli: Ibn Khaldun und das politische System Syriens – Eine Gegenüberstellung, München, 2007, ISBN 978-3-638-75458-3 (German e-book about the politics of Syria with reference to the political theory of Ibn Khaldun)
  • Kuchinov A.M. Ibn Khaldun influence on social thought development // Lomonosov-2013. – Moscow, 2013. In Russian.
  • Master's thesis on Ibn Khaldun published by FFLCH-USP in 2017 Roschel, Renato – São Paulo, 2017. In Portuguese.

khaldun, horse, horse, arabic, أبو, زيد, عبد, الرحمن, بن, محمد, بن, خلدون, الحضرمي, abū, zayd, raḥmān, muḥammad, khaldūn, Ḥaḍramī, 1332, march, 1406, arab, sociologist, philosopher, historian, widely, acknowledged, greatest, social, scientists, middle, ages, c. For the horse see Ibn Khaldun horse Ibn Khaldun ˈ ɪ b en x ae l ˈ d uː n Arabic أبو زيد عبد الرحمن بن محمد بن خلدون الحضرمي Abu Zayd Abd ar Raḥman ibn Muḥammad ibn Khaldun al Ḥaḍrami 27 May 1332 17 March 1406 732 808 AH was an Arab 10 sociologist philosopher and historian 11 12 widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest social scientists of the Middle Ages 13 and considered by many to be the father of historiography sociology economics and demography studies 14 15 note 1 16 note 2 Ibn KhaldunBust of Ibn Khaldun in the entrance of the Kasbah of Bejaia AlgeriaPersonalBorn27 May 1332Tunis Hafsid SultanateDied17 March 1406 1406 03 18 aged 73 Cairo Mamluk SultanateReligionIslamDenominationSunni 1 JurisprudenceMaliki 2 CreedAsh ari 3 4 Main interest s Historiographysociologyeconomicsdemographypolitical scienceNotable idea s Asabiyyah Conquest theory of state formation Cyclical theory of empires Economic growth theory 5 Supply and demand theory 6 Supply side economicsMuslim leaderInfluenced by Al Farabi 7 Al Ghazali 4 Al Jahiz 8 Al Razi 4 Al Tusi Aristotle At Turtushi 9 Avempace Averroes 4 Avicenna 4 Ibn Abi Zar Ibn Hazm Ibn JarirInfluenced Ibn al Khatib Ibn al Sakkak Al Maqrizi Ibn al Azraq Celebi Mustafa Naima Ahmed Cevdet 20th century traditionalism Toynbee Orowan Amel Ronald ReaganHis best known book the Muqaddimah or Prolegomena Introduction which he wrote in six months as he states in his autobiography 17 influenced 17th century and 19th century Ottoman historians such as Katip Celebi Mustafa Naima and Ahmed Cevdet Pasha who used its theories to analyze the growth and decline of the Ottoman Empire 18 Ibn Khaldun interacted with Tamerlane the founder of the Timurid Empire Recently Ibn Khaldun s works have been compared with those of influential European philosophers such as Niccolo Machiavelli Giambattista Vico David Hume G W F Hegel Karl Marx and Auguste Comte as well as the economists David Ricardo and Adam Smith suggesting that their ideas found precedent although not direct influence in his He has also been influential on certain modern Islamic thinkers e g those of the traditionalist school as well as on Reaganomics Contents 1 Family 2 Education 3 Political career 4 Later life 5 Works 5 1 al Muqaddima and the rest of Kitab al ʻIbar 5 2 Social thought 5 3 Minor works 6 Legacy 6 1 Egypt 6 2 Ottoman Empire 6 3 Europe 6 4 Modern historians 6 5 Public recognition 7 Bibliography 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External links 12 1 English 12 2 Non EnglishFamily Edit Ibn Khaldun Life size bronze bust sculpture of Ibn Khaldun that is part of the collection at the Arab American National Museum Catalog Number 2010 02 Commissioned by The Tunisian Community Center and Created by Patrick Morelli of Albany NY in 2009 It was inspired by the statue of Ibn Khaldun erected at the Avenue Habib Bourguiba in Tunis 19 Ibn Khaldun s life is relatively well documented as he wrote an autobiography التعريف بابن خلدون ورحلته غربا وشرقا at Taʻrif bi ibn Khaldun wa Riḥlatih Gharban wa Sharqan 20 Presenting Ibn Khaldun and his Journey West and East in which numerous documents regarding his life are quoted word for word Abdurahman bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Al Hasan bin Jabir bin Muhammad bin Ibrahim bin Abdurahman bin Ibn Khaldun al Hadrami generally known as Ibn Khaldun after a remote ancestor was born in Tunis in AD 1332 732 AH into an upper class Andalusian family of Arab descent 10 the family s ancestor was a Hadhrami who shared kinship with Wail ibn Hujr a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad His family which held many high offices in Al Andalus had emigrated to Tunisia after the fall of Seville to the Reconquista in AD 1248 Although some of his family members had held political office in the Tunisian Hafsid dynasty his father and grandfather later withdrew from political life and joined a mystical order His brother Yahya Khaldun was also a historian who wrote a book on the Abdalwadid dynasty and was assassinated by a rival for being the official historiographer of the court 21 In his autobiography Khaldun traces his descent back to the time of Muhammad through an Arab tribe from the south of the Arabian Peninsula specifically the Hadhramaut which came to the Iberian Peninsula in the 8th century at the beginning of the Islamic conquest And our ancestry is from Hadhramaut from the Arabs of Arabian Peninsula via Wa il ibn Hujr also known as Hujr ibn Adi from the best of the Arabs well known and respected p 2429 Al Waraq s edition However the modern biographer Mohammad Enan emphasised the unclear origins of Ibn Khaldun relying on the fact that Ibn Khaldun s criticism of Arabs might be a valid reason to cast doubt on his Arab origin On the other hand Ibn Khaldun s insistence and attachment to his claim of Arab ancestry at a time of Berber dynasties domination is also a valid reason to believe his claim 22 23 Education EditHis family s high rank enabled Ibn Khaldun to study with prominent teachers in Maghreb He received a classical Islamic education studying the Quran which he memorized by heart Arabic linguistics the basis for understanding the Qur an hadith sharia law and fiqh jurisprudence He received certification ijazah for all of those subjects 24 The mathematician and philosopher Al Abili of Tlemcen introduced him to mathematics logic and philosophy and he studied especially the works of Averroes Avicenna Razi and Tusi At the age of 17 Ibn Khaldun lost both his parents to the Black Death an intercontinental epidemic of the plague that hit Tunis in 1348 1349 25 Following family tradition he strove for a political career In the face of a tumultuous political situation in North Africa that required a high degree of skill in developing and dropping alliances prudently to avoid falling with the short lived regimes of the time 26 Ibn Khaldun s autobiography is the story of an adventure in which he spends time in prison reaches the highest offices and falls again into exile Political career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Birth home of Ibn Khaldun at Tunis The mosque in which Ibn Khaldun studied At the age of 20 he began his political career in the chancellery of the Tunisian ruler Ibn Tafrakin with the position of Katib al Alamah seal bearer 27 which consisted of writing in fine calligraphy the typical introductory notes of official documents In 1352 Abu Ziad the sultan of Constantine marched on Tunis and defeated it Ibn Khaldun in any case unhappy with his respected but politically meaningless position followed his teacher Abili to Fez There the Marinid sultan Abu Inan Fares I appointed him as a writer of royal proclamations but Ibn Khaldun still schemed against his employer which in 1357 got the 25 year old a 22 month prison sentence Upon the death of Abu Inan in 1358 Vizier al Hasan ibn Umar granted him freedom and reinstated him to his rank and offices Ibn Khaldun then schemed against Abu Inan s successor Abu Salem Ibrahim III with Abu Salem s exiled uncle Abu Salem When Abu Salem came to power he gave Ibn Khaldun a ministerial position the first position to correspond with Ibn Khaldun s ambitions The treatment that Ibn Khaldun received after the fall of Abu Salem through Ibn Amar ʻAbdullah a friend of Ibn Khaldun s was not to his liking as he received no significant official position At the same time Amar successfully prevented Ibn Khaldun whose political skills he knew well from allying with the Abd al Wadids in Tlemcen Ibn Khaldun therefore decided to move to Granada He could be sure of a positive welcome there since at Fez he had helped the Sultan of Granada the Nasrid Muhammad V regain power from his temporary exile In 1364 Muhammad entrusted him with a diplomatic mission to the king of Castile Pedro the Cruel to endorse a peace treaty Ibn Khaldun successfully carried out this mission and politely declined Pedro s offer to remain at his court and have his family s Spanish possessions returned to him In Granada Ibn Khaldun quickly came into competition with Muhammad s vizier Ibn al Khatib who viewed the close relationship between Muhammad and Ibn Khaldun with increasing mistrust Ibn Khaldun tried to shape the young Muhammad into his ideal of a wise ruler an enterprise that Ibn al Khatib thought foolish and a danger to peace in the country History proved al Khatib right and at his instigation Ibn Khaldun was eventually sent back to North Africa Al Khatib himself was later accused by Muhammad of having unorthodox philosophical views and murdered despite an attempt by Ibn Khaldun to intercede on behalf of his old rival In his autobiography Ibn Khaldun tells little about his conflict with Ibn al Khatib and the reasons for his departure Orientalist Muhsin Mahdi interprets that as showing that Ibn Khaldun later realised that he had completely misjudged Muhammad V Back in Ifriqiya the Hafsid sultan of Bougie Abu ʻAbdallah who had been his companion in prison received him with great enthusiasm and made Ibn Khaldun his prime minister Ibn Khaldun carried out a daring mission to collect taxes among the local Berber tribes After the death of Abu ʻAbdallah in 1366 Ibn Khaldun changed sides once again and allied himself with the Sultan of Tlemcen Abu l Abbas A few years later he was taken prisoner by Abu Faris Abdul Aziz who had defeated the sultan of Tlemcen and seized the throne He then entered a monastic establishment and occupied himself with scholastic duties until 1370 In that year he was sent for to Tlemcen by the new sultan After the death of ʻAbdu l Aziz he resided at Fez enjoying the patronage and confidence of the regent Ibn Khaldun s political skills and above all his good relationship with the wild Berber tribes were in high demand among the North African rulers but he had begun to tire of politics and constantly switching allegiances In 1375 he was sent by Abu Hammu the ʻAbdu l Wadid Sultan of Tlemcen on a mission to the Dawadida Arabs tribes of Biskra After his return to the West Ibn Khaldun sought refuge with one of the Berber tribes in the west of Algeria in the town of Qalat Ibn Salama He lived there for over three years under their protection taking advantage of his seclusion to write the Muqaddimah Prolegomena the introduction to his planned history of the world In Ibn Salama however he lacked the necessary texts to complete the work 28 Therefore in 1378 he returned to his native Tunis which had meanwhile been conquered by Abu l Abbas who took Ibn Khaldun back into his service There he devoted himself almost exclusively to his studies and completed his history of the world His relationship with Abu l Abbas remained strained as the latter questioned his loyalty That was brought into sharp contrast after Ibn Khaldun presented him with a copy of the completed history that omitted the usual panegyric to the ruler Under pretence of going on the Hajj to Mecca something for which a Muslim ruler could not simply refuse permission Ibn Khaldun was able to leave Tunis and to sail to Alexandria Later life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ibn Khaldun Statue and Square Mohandessin Cairo Ibn Khaldun said of Egypt He who has not seen it does not know the power of Islam 29 While other Islamic regions had to cope with border wars and inner strife Mamluk Egypt enjoyed prosperity and high culture In 1384 the Egyptian Sultan al Malik udh Dhahir Barquq made Khaldun professor of the Qamhiyyah Madrasah and appointed him as the Grand qadi of the Maliki school of fiqh one of four schools the Maliki school was widespread primarily in Western Africa His efforts at reform encountered resistance however and within a year he had to resign his judgeship Also in 1384 a ship carrying Khaldun s wife and children sank off of Alexandria After his return from a pilgrimage to Mecca in May 1388 Ibn Khaldun concentrated on teaching at various Cairo madrasas At the Mamluk court he fell from favor because during revolts against Barquq he had apparently under duress with other Cairo jurists issued a fatwa against Barquq Later relations with Barquq returned to normal and he was once again named the Maliki qadi Altogether he was called six times to that high office which for various reasons he never held long In 1401 under Barquq s successor his son Faraj Ibn Khaldun took part in a military campaign against the Mongol conqueror Timur who besieged Damascus in 1400 Ibn Khaldun cast doubt upon the viability of the venture and really wanted to stay in Egypt His doubts were vindicated as the young and inexperienced Faraj concerned about a revolt in Egypt left his army to its own devices in Syria and hurried home Ibn Khaldun remained at the besieged city for seven weeks being lowered over the city wall by ropes to negotiate with Timur in a historic series of meetings that he reported extensively in his autobiography 30 Timur questioned him in detail about conditions in the lands of the Maghreb At his request Ibn Khaldun even wrote a long report about it As he recognized Timur s intentions he did not hesitate on his return to Egypt to compose an equally extensive report on the history of the Tatars together with a character study of Timur sending them to the Merinid rulers in Fez Maghreb Ibn Khaldun spent the next five years in Cairo completing his autobiography and his history of the world and acting as teacher and judge Meanwhile he was alleged to have joined an underground party Rijal Hawa Rijal whose reform oriented ideals attracted the attention of local political authorities The elderly Ibn Khaldun was placed under arrest He died on 17 March 1406 one month after his sixth selection for the office of the Maliki qadi Judge Works Edit Handwriting of Ibn Khaldun certifying a manuscript copy of al Muqaddima MS Atif Efendi ar 1936 f 7a al Muqaddima and the rest of Kitab al ʻIbar Edit Kitab al ʻIbar full title Kitab al ʻIbar wa Diwan al Mubtadaʼ wa l Khabar fi Taʼrikh al ʻArab wa l Barbar wa Man ʻAṣarahum min Dhawi ash Shaʼn al Akbar Book of Lessons Record of Beginnings and Events in the History of the Arabs and the Berbers and Their Powerful Contemporaries begun as a history of the Berbers and expanded to a universal history in seven books 31 32 Book 1 Al Muqaddima The Introduction a socio economic geographical universal history of empires and the best known of his works 33 Books 2 5 World History up to the author s own time Books 6 7 Historiography of the Berbers and the Maghreb Khaldun departs from the classical style of Arab historians note 3 by synthesising multiple sometimes contradictory sources without citations 34 He reproduces some errors originating probably from his 14th century Fez source the work Rawḍ al Qirṭas by Ibn Abi Zar yet Al Ibar remains an invaluable source of Berber history Businesses owned by responsible and organized merchants shall eventually surpass those owned by wealthy rulers 35 Ibn Khaldun on economic growth and the ideals of PlatonismConcerning the discipline of sociology he described the dichotomy of sedentary life versus nomadic life as well as the inevitable loss of power that occurs when warriors conquer a city According to the Arab scholar Sati al Husri the Muqaddimah may be read as a sociological work The work is based around Ibn Khaldun s central concept of aṣabiyyah which has been translated as social cohesion group solidarity or tribalism This social cohesion arises spontaneously in tribes and other small kinship groups it can be intensified and enlarged by a religious ideology Ibn Khaldun s analysis looks at how this cohesion carries groups to power but contains within itself the seeds psychological sociological economic political of the group s downfall to be replaced by a new group dynasty or empire bound by a stronger or at least younger and more vigorous cohesion Some of Ibn Khaldun s views particularly those concerning the Zanj people of sub Saharan Africa 36 have been cited as racist 37 though they were not uncommon for their time According to the scholar Abdelmajid Hannoum Ibn Khaldun s description of the distinctions between Berbers and Arabs were misinterpreted by the translator William McGuckin de Slane who wrongly inserted a racial ideology that sets Arabs and Berbers apart and in opposition into his translation of part of Ibar translated under the title Histoire des Berberes 38 Perhaps the most frequently cited observation drawn from Ibn Khaldun s work is the notion that when a society becomes a great civilization its high point is followed by a period of decay This means that the next cohesive group that conquers the diminished civilization is by comparison a group of barbarians Once the barbarians solidify their control over the conquered society however they become attracted to its more refined aspects such as literacy and arts and either assimilate into or appropriate such cultural practices Then eventually the former barbarians will be conquered by a new set of barbarians who will repeat the process Georgetown University Professor Ibrahim Oweiss an economist and historian argues that Ibn Khaldun was a major forerunner of modern economists and in particular originated the labor theory of value long before better known proponents such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo although Khaldun did not refer to it as either a labor theory of value or theory 39 Ibn Khaldun also called for the creation of a science to explain society and went on to outline these ideas in his major work the Muqaddimah which states that Civilization and its well being as well as business prosperity depend on productivity and people s efforts in all directions in their own interest and profit 40 Ibn Khaldun diverged from norms that Muslim historians followed and rejected their focus on the credibility of the transmitter and focused instead on the validity of the stories and encouraged critical thinking 41 Ibn Khaldun also outlines early theories of division of labor taxes scarcity and economic growth 42 He argued that poverty was a result of the destruction of morality and human values He also looked at what factors contribute to wealth such as consumption government and investment Khaldun also argued that poverty was not necessarily a result of poor financial decision making but of external consequences and therefore the government should be involved in alleviating poverty Researchers from Malaysia s Insaniah University College and Indonesia s Tazkia University College of Islamic Economics created a dynamics model based upon Ibn Khaldun s writings to measure poverty in the Muslim nations of South Asia and Southeast Asia 43 Ibn Khaldun also believed that the currency of an Islamic monetary system should have intrinsic value and therefore be made of gold and silver such as the dirham He emphasized that the weight and purity of these coins should be strictly followed the weight of one dinar should be one mithqal the weight of 72 grains of barley roughly 4 25 grams and the weight of 7 dinar should be equal to weight of 10 dirhams 7 10 of a mithqal or 2 96 grams 44 Ibn Khaldun s writings regarding the division of labor are often compared to Adam Smith s writings on the topic The individual being cannot by himself obtain all the necessities of life All human beings must co operate to that end in their civilization But what is obtained by the cooperation of a group of human beings satisfies the need of a number many times greater than themselves For instance no one by himself can obtain the share of the wheat he needs for food But when six or ten persons including a smith and a carpenter to make the tools and others who are in charge of the oxen the ploughing of the harvesting of the ripe grain and all other agricultural activities undertake to obtain their food and work toward that purpose either separately or collectively and thus obtain through their labour a certain amount of food that amount will be food for a number of people many times their own The combined labour produces more than the needs and necessities of the workers Ibn Khaldun 1958 vol II 271 272 45 In every other art and manufacture the effects of the division of labour are similar to what they are in this very trifling one pin production though in many of them the labour can either be so much subdivided nor reduced to so great a simplicity of operation The division of labour however so far as it can be introduced occasions in every art a proportionable increase of the productive powers of labour Smith 1976a vol I 13 24 46 Both Ibn Khaldun and Smith shared the idea that the division of labor is fundamental to economic growth however the motivations and context for such division differed between them For Ibn Khaldun asabiyyah or social solidarity was the underlying motive and context behind the division of labor for Smith it was self interest and the market economy 47 Social thought Edit Ibn Khaldun s epistemology attempted to reconcile mysticism with theology by dividing science into two different categories the religious science that regards the sciences of the Qur an and the non religious science He further classified the non religious sciences into intellectual sciences such as logic arithmetic geometry astronomy etc and auxiliary sciences such as language literature poetry etc He also suggested that possibly more divisions will appear in the future with different societies He tried to adapt to all possible societies cultural behavior and influence in education economics and politics Nonetheless he didn t think that laws were chosen by just one leader or a small group of individual but mostly by the majority of the individuals of a society 48 To Ibn Khaldun the state was a necessity of human society to restrain injustice within the society but the state means is force thus itself an injustice All societies must have a state governing them in order to establish a society He attempted to standardize the history of societies by identifying ubiquitous phenomena present in all societies To him civilization was a phenomenon that will be present as long as humans exist He characterized the fulfillment of basic needs as the beginning of civilization At the beginning people will look for different ways of increasing productivity of basic needs and expansion will occur Later the society starts becoming more sedentary and focuses more on crafting arts and the more refined characteristics By the end of a society it will weaken allowing another small group of individuals to come into control The conquering group is described as an unsatisfied group within the society itself or a group of desert bandits that constantly attack other weaker or weakened societies In the Muqaddimah his most important work he discusses an introduction of philosophy to history in a general manner based on observable patterns within a theoretical framework of known historical events of his time He described the beginnings development cultural trends and the fall of all societies leading to the rise of a new society which would then follow the same trends in a continuous cycle Also he recommended the best political approaches to develop a society according to his knowledge of history He heavily emphasized that a good society would be one in which a tradition of education is deeply rooted in its culture 27 Ibn Khaldun 1987 introduced the word asabiya solidarity group feeling or group consciousness to explain tribalism The concept of asabiya has been translated as social cohesion group solidarity or tribalism This social cohesion arises spontaneously in tribes and other small kinship groups Rashed 2017 Ibn Khaldun believed that too much bureaucracy such as taxes and legislations would lead to the decline of a society since it would constrain the development of more specialized labor increase in scholars and development of different services He believed that bureaucrats cannot understand the world of commerce and do not possess the same motivation as a businessman 27 In his work the Muqaddimah Ibn Khaldun emphasizes human beings faculty to think fikr as what determines human behavior and ubiquitous patterns This faculty is also what inspires human beings to form into a social structure to co operate in division of labor and organization According to Zaid Ahmand in Epistemology and the Human Dimension in Urban Studies the fikr faculty is the supporting pillar for all philosophical aspects of Ibn Khaldun s theory related to human beings spiritual intellectual physical social and political tendencies Another important concept he emphasizes in his work is the mastery of crafts habits and skills This takes place after a society is established and according to Ibn Khaldun the level of achievement of a society can be determined by just analyzing these three concepts A society in its earliest stages is nomadic and primarily concerned with survival while a society at a later stage is sedentary with greater achievement in crafts A society with a sedentary culture and stable politics would be expected to have greater achievements in crafts and technology 27 Ibn Khaldun also emphasized in his epistemology the important aspect that educational tradition plays to ensure the new generations of a civilization continuously improve in the sciences and develop culture Ibn Khaldun argued that without the strong establishment of an educational tradition it would be very difficult for the new generations to maintain the achievements of the earlier generations let alone improve them Another way to distinguish the achievement of a society would be the language of a society since for him the most important element of a society would not be land but the language spoken He was surprised that many non Arabs were really successful in the Arabic society had good jobs and were well received by the community These people were non Arab by descent but they grew up among the Arabs who possessed the habit of Arabic Ibn Khaldun once recalled b ecause of this they were able to master Arabic so well that they cannot be surpassed 49 He believed that the reason why non Arabs were accepted as part of Arab society was due to their mastery of the Arabic language Advancements in literary works such as poems and prose were another way to distinguish the achievement of a civilization but Ibn Khaldun believed that whenever the literary facet of a society reaches its highest levels it ceases to indicate societal achievements anymore but is an embellishment of life For logical sciences he established knowledge at its highest level as an increase of scholars and the quality of knowledge For him the highest level of literary productions would be the manifestation of prose poems and the artistic enrichment of a society 50 Minor works Edit From other sources we know of several other works primarily composed during the time he spent in North Africa and Al Andalus His first book Lubabu l Muhassal a commentary on the Islamic theology of Fakhr al Din al Razi was written at the age of 19 under the supervision of his teacher al Abili in Tunis A work on Sufism Shifa u l Sa il was composed around 1373 in Fes Morocco Whilst at the court of Muhammed V Sultan of Granada Ibn Khaldun composed a work on logic ʻallaqa li s Sulṭan Legacy Edit A Laffer Curve with a maximum revenue point at around a 70 as estimated by Trabandt and Uhlig 2009 51 Laffer cites Ibn Khaldun s observation that at the beginning of the dynasty taxation yields a large revenue from small assessments At the end of the dynasty taxation yields a small revenue from large assessments 52 53 Egypt Edit Ibn Khaldun s historical method had very few precedents or followers in his time While Ibn Khaldun is known to have been a successful lecturer on jurisprudence within religious sciences only very few of his students were aware of and influenced by his Muqaddimah 54 One such student Al Maqrizi praised the Muqaddimah although some scholars have found his praise and that of others to be generally empty and lacking understanding of Ibn Khaldun s methods 54 Ibn Khaldun also faced primarily criticism from his contemporaries particularly Ibn Hajar al Asqalani These criticisms included accusations of inadequate historical knowledge an inaccurate title disorganization and a style resembling that of the prolific Arab literature writer Al Jahiz Al Asqalani also noted that Ibn Khaldun was not well liked in Egypt because he opposed many respected traditions including the traditional judicial dress and suggested that this may have contributed to the reception of Ibn Khaldun s historical works 54 The notable exception to this consensus was Ibn al Azraq a jurist who lived shortly after Ibn Khaldun and quoted heavily from the first and fourth books of the Kitab al Ibar in developing a work of mirrors for princes 54 Ottoman Empire Edit Ibn Khaldun s work found some recognition with Ottoman intellectuals in the 17th century The first references to Ibn Khaldun in Ottoman writings appeared in the middle of the 17th century with historians such as Katip Celebi naming him as a great influence while another Turkish Ottoman historian Mustafa Naima attempted to use Ibn Khaldun s cyclical theory of the rise and fall of empires to describe the Ottoman Empire 54 Increasing perceptions of the decline of the Ottoman Empire also caused similar ideas to appear independently of Ibn Khaldun in the 16th century and may explain some of the influence of his works 54 Europe Edit In Europe Ibn Khaldun was first brought to the attention of the Western world in 1697 when a biography of him appeared in Barthelemy d Herbelot de Molainville s Bibliotheque Orientale However some scholars believe that Ibn Khaldun s work may have first been introduced to Europe via Ibn Arabshah s biography of Tamerlane translated to Latin which covers a meeting between Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane 55 According to Ibn Arabshah during this meeting Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane discussed the Maghrib in depth as well as Tamerlane s genealogy and place in history 56 Ibn Khaldun began gaining more attention from 1806 when Silvestre de Sacy s Chrestomathie Arabe included his biography together with a translation of parts of the Muqaddimah as the Prolegomena 57 In 1816 de Sacy again published a biography with a more detailed description on the Prolegomena 58 More details on and partial translations of the Prolegomena emerged over the years until the complete Arabic edition was published in 1858 Since then the work of Ibn Khaldun has been extensively studied in the Western world with special interest 59 Reynold A Nicholson praised Ibn Khaldun as a uniquely brilliant Muslim sociologist but discounted Khaldun s influence 55 Spanish Philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset viewed the conflicts of North Africa as a problem that stemmed from a lack of African thought and praised Ibn Khaldun for making sense of the conflict by simplifying it to the relationship between the nomadic and sedentary modes of life 55 Modern historians Edit British historian Arnold J Toynbee has called Ibn Khaldun s Muqaddimah the greatest work of its kind 60 Ernest Gellner once a professor of philosophy and logic at the London School of Economics considered Khaldun s definition of government note 4 the best in the history of political theory 61 More moderate views on the scope of Ibn Khaldun s contributions have also emerged Arthur Laffer for whom the Laffer curve is named acknowledged that Ibn Khaldun s ideas as well as others precede his own work on that curve 62 Economist Paul Krugman described Ibn Khaldun as a 14th century Islamic philosopher who basically invented what we would now call the social sciences 63 19th century Scottish theologian and philosopher Robert Flint praised him strongly as a theorist of history he had no equal in any age or country until Vico appeared more than three hundred years later Plato Aristotle and Augustine were not his peers and all others were unworthy of being even mentioned along with him Ibn Khaldun s work on evolution of societies also influenced Egon Orowan who termed the concept of socionomy 64 While Ibn Khaldun s record keeping is usually passed over in favor of recognizing his contributions to the science of history Abderrahmane Lakhsassi wrote No historian of the Maghreb since and particularly of the Berbers can do without his historical contribution 65 Public recognition Edit Public recognition of Ibn Khaldun has increased in recent years In 2004 the Tunisian Community Center launched the first Ibn Khaldun Award to recognize a Tunisian American high achiever whose work reflects Ibn Khaldun s ideas of kinship and solidarity The Award was named after Ibn Khaldun for the convergence of his ideas with the organization s objectives and programs In 2006 the Atlas Economic Research Foundation launched an annual essay contest 66 for students named in Ibn Khaldun s honor The theme of the contest is how individuals think tanks universities and entrepreneurs can influence government policies to allow the free market to flourish and improve the lives of its citizens based on Islamic teachings and traditions 66 In 2006 Spain commemorated the 600th anniversary of the death of Ibn Khaldun by orchestrating an exhibit titled Encounter of Civilizations Ibn Khaldun 67 In 2007 Ibn Haldun Universitesi has opened in Istanbul Turkey to commemorate his name The university promotes a policy of trilingualism The languages in question are English Modern Turkish and Arabic and its emphasis is on teaching social sciences In 1981 U S President Ronald Reagan cited Ibn Khaldun as an influence on his supply side economic policies also known as Reaganomics He paraphrased Ibn Khaldun who said that in the beginning of the dynasty great tax revenues were gained from small assessments and that at the end of the dynasty small tax revenues were gained from large assessments Reagan said his goal is trying to get down to the small assessments and the great revenues 68 The Iraqi Navy named a frigate after Ibn Khaldun Bibliography EditKitab al ʻIbar wa Diwan al Mubtadaʼ wa l Khabar fi Taʼrikh al ʻArab wa l Barbar wa Man ʻAṣarahum min Dhawi ash Shaʼn al Akbar Lubabu l Muhassal fee Uswoolu d Deen Shifa u s Sa il ʻAl Laqaw li s Sulṭan Ibn Khaldun 1951 التعريف بإبن خلدون ورحلته غربا وشرقا Al Taʻrif bi Ibn Khaldun wa Riħlatuhu Għarban wa Sharqan Published by Muħammad ibn Tawit at Tanji Cairo Autobiography in Arabic Ibn Khaldun 1958 The Muqaddimah An introduction to history Translated from the Arabic by Franz Rosenthal 3 vols New York Princeton Ibn Khaldun 1967 The Muqaddimah An introduction to history Trans Franz Rosenthal ed N J Dawood Abridged Ibn Khaldun 1332 1406 1905 A Selection from the Prolegomena of Ibn Khaldun Trans Duncan MacdonaldSee also Edit Society portal Philosophy portal Islam portal History portal Middle Ages portal Biography portalList of pre modern Arab scientists and scholars Asabiyyah Chanakya Egon Orowan List of Muslim historians Historiography of early Islam Laffer curve Muqaddimah Science in medieval Islam Social cycle theory Averroes Abulcasis Ibn Arabi Ibn Tufail Sayyid Husayn AhlatiNotes Edit regarded by some Westerners as the true father of historiography and sociology 69 Ibn Khaldun has been claimed the forerunner of a great number of European thinkers mostly sociologists historians and philosophers Boulakia 1971 The founding father of Eastern Sociology 70 This grand scheme to find a new science of society makes him the forerunner of many of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries system builders such as Vico Comte and Marx As one of the early founders of the social sciences 71 He is considered by some as a father of modern economics or at least a major forerunner The Western world recognizes Khaldun as the father of sociology but hesitates in recognizing him as a great economist who laid its very foundations He was the first to systematically analyze the functioning of an economy the importance of technology specialization and foreign trade in economic surplus and the role of government and its stabilization policies to increase output and employment Moreover he dealt with the problem of optimum taxation minimum government services incentives institutional framework law and order expectations production and the theory of value Cosma Sorinel 2009 Ibn Khaldun s Economic Thinking Ovidius University Annals of Economics Ovidius University Press XIV 52 57 For classical style of Arab historians see Ibrahim ibn ar Raqiq d 1028 and al Maliki an institution which prevents injustice other than such as it commits itself References EditCitations Edit Ibn Khaldun His Life and Work Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2017 Ahmad Zaid 2010 Ibn Khaldun In Oliver Leama ed The Biographical Encyclopaedia of Islamic Philosophy Continuum doi 10 1093 acref 9780199754731 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 975473 1 Doniger Wendy 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webstar Inc p 82 ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 a b c d e https themaydan com 2017 11 myth intellectual decline response shaykh hamza yusuf Ibn Khaldun on Philosophy After clarifying what was meant precisely by philosophy in the Islamic tradition namely the various schools of peripatetic philosophy represented either by Ibn Rushd or Ibn Sina it should be clear why Ibn Khaldun was opposed to them His critique of philosophy is an Ash ari critique completely in line with the Ash aris before him including Ghazali and Fakhr al din al Razi both of whom Ibn Khaldun recommends for those who wish to learn how to refute the philosophers Muqaddimah 2 272 73 quoted in Weiss 1995 p 30 Weiss 1995 p 31 quotes Muqaddimah 2 276 78 Moss Laurence S ed 1996 Joseph A Schumpeter Historian of Economics Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought Routledge p 87 ISBN 978 1 134 78530 8 Ibn Khaldun drited away from Al Farabi s political idealism Shah Muhammad Sultan Pre Darwinian Muslim Scholars Views on Evolution 2017 In al Muqaddima Ibn Khaldun cites him as a pioneer in sociology a b Savant Sarah Bowen 2014 Genealogy and Knowledge in Muslim Societies Understanding the Past Edinburgh University Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 7486 4497 1 Banu Khaldun al Hadrami Yemen but not Qahtan to which belonged the famous historian Ibn Khaldun The family s ancestor was Uthman ibn Bakr ibn Khalid called Khaldun a Yemeni Arab among the conquerors who shared kinship with the Prophet s Companian Wa il ibn Hujr and who settled first in Carmona and then in Seville The Historical Muhammad Irving M Zeitlin Polity Press 2007 p 21 It is of course Ibn Khaldun as an Arab here speaking for he claims Arab descent through the male line The Arab World Society Culture and State Halim Barakat University of California Press 1993 p 48 The renowned Arab sociologist historian Ibn Khaldun first interpreted Arab history in terms of badu versus hadar conflicts and struggles for power Ibn Khaldun M Talbi The Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol III ed B Lewis V L Menage C Pellat J Schacht Brill 1986 825 Ibn Khaldun was born in Tunis on I Ramadan 732 27 May 1332 in an Arab family which came originally from the Hadramawt and had been settled at Seville since the beginning of the Muslim conquest Ibn Khaldun s Philosophy of History A Study in the Philosophic Foundation of the Science of Culture Muhsin Mahdi Routledge His family claimed descent from a Yemenite tribe originating in Hadramawt Issawi Charles Ibn Khaldun Encyclopedia Britannica 13 March 2021 the greatest Arab historian the family claimed descent from Khaldun who was of South Arabian stock and had come to Spain in the early years of the Arab conquest and settled in Carmona Cheddadi Abdesselam Ibn Khaldun ʿAbd al Raḥman Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE was one of the greatest Arab historians a philosopher and a sociologist Muhammad Hozien Ibn Khaldun His Life and Work Islamic Philosophy Online Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 19 September 2008 Ibn Khaldun The Muqaddimah Ibn Khaldun s philosophy of history Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 December 2020 Bernard Lewis Ibn Khaldun in Turkey in Ibn Khaldun The Mediterranean in the 14th Century Rise and Fall of Empires Foundation El Legado Andalusi 2006 ISBN 978 84 96556 34 8 pp 376 80 376 S M Deen 2007 Science under Islam rise decline and revival p 157 ISBN 1 84799 942 5 Farid Alatas Syed 2015 Applying Ibn Khaldun The Recovery of a Lost Tradition in Sociology Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 12596 4 OCLC 914395509 Sulkunen Pekka 2 September 2014 The proto sociology of Mandeville and Hume Distinktion Journal of Social Theory 15 3 361 365 doi 10 1080 1600910X 2014 897639 ISSN 1600 910X S2CID 144222817 Joseph J Spengler 1964 Economic Thought of Islam Ibn Khaldun Comparative Studies in Society and History 6 3 pp 268 306 Boulakia 1971 pp 1105 1118 Ali Zaidi Islam Modernity and the Human Sciences Springer 2011 p 84 Lewis Bernard 1986 Ibn Khaldun in Turkey In Ayalon David Sharon Moshe eds Studies in Islamic history and civilization in honour of Professor David Ayalon Brill pp 527 30 ISBN 978 965 264 014 7 Arab American National Museum Online Collections Retrieved 25 February 2017 Published by Muḥammad ibn Tawit aṭ Ṭanji Cairo 1951 Lettre a Monsieur Garcin de Tassy Journal Asiatique in French Paris Societe asiatique 3 12 491 1841 Hozien Muhammad Notes on Ibn Khaludn s Life You are being directed to the new muslim philosophy Website has moved to muslimphilosophy org Enan Mohammad Abdullah 2007 Ibn Khaldun His Life and Works The Other Press ISBN 978 983 9541 53 3 Muhammad Hozien Ibn Khaldun His Life and Work Islamic Philosophy Online Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 19 September 2008 Saudi Aramco World Ibn Khaldun and the Rise and Fall of Empires archive aramcoworld com Retrieved 6 December 2017 Ibn Khaldun His Life and Work www muslimphilosophy com Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 6 December 2017 a b c d Ibn Khaldun His Life and Works Muslim Heritage muslimheritage com Archived from the original on 6 December 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Ibn Khaldun s Political and Economic Realism 26 March 2016 Ibn Khaldun Muslim historian Bent Josephine van den 3 May 2016 None of the Kings on Earth is Their Equal in ʿaṣabiyya The Mongols in Ibn Khaldun s Works Al Masaq 28 2 171 86 doi 10 1080 09503110 2016 1198535 ISSN 0950 3110 Ibn Khaldun the Muqaddimah An Introduction to History Translated from the Arabic by Franz Rosenthal In Three Volumes First Volume 606 pages Bollingen Foundation Series xliii Princeton University Press 1958 Prof Dr Darcy Carvalho Feausp Sao Paulo Brazil 2016 The Muqaddimah Volume 1 Schmidt Nathaniel Ibn Khaldun Historian Sociologist and Philosopher Universal Books 1900 See articles by Moderan and Benabbes in Identites et Cultures dans l Algerie Antique University of Rouen 2005 ISBN 2 87775 391 3 Muqaddimah 2 1995 p 30 Southgate Minoo 1984 The Negative Images of Blacks in Some Medieval Iranian Writings Iranian Studies 17 1 15 doi 10 1080 00210868408701620 JSTOR 4310424 Kevin Reilly Stephen Kaufman Angela Bodino eds 2003 Racism A Global Reader M E Sharpe p 123 ISBN 978 0 7656 1059 1 Hannoum Abdelmajid 2003 Translation and the Colonial Imaginary Ibn Khaldun Orientalist History and Theory 42 1 77 80 doi 10 1111 1468 2303 00230 JSTOR 3590803 Oweiss Ibrahim M Ibn Khaldun the Father of Economics Georgetown University State University of New York Press 1988 faculty georgetown edu imo3 ibn htm Khaldun Ibn et al Muqaddimah an Introduction to History Princeton University Press 2015 The Amazing Arab Scholar Who Beat Adam Smith by Half a Millennium Evonomics Evonomics 9 June 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Irwin Robert Ibn Khaldun an Intellectual Biography Princeton University Press 2018 Affandi Akhmad and Dewi Puji Astuti Dynamic Model of Ibn Khaldun Theory on Poverty Humanomics vol 30 no 2 2014 pp 136 161 Ibn Khaldun The Muqaddimah ch 3 pt 34 35 Labor in an Islamic setting theory and practice 1 ed New York 2017 pp 40 41 ISBN 978 1 315 59127 8 Labor in an Islamic setting theory and practice 1 ed New York 2017 pp 40 41 ISBN 978 1 315 59127 8 Labor in an Islamic setting theory and practice 1 ed New York 2017 pp 40 41 ISBN 978 1 315 59127 8 Ahmad Zaid 2003 The epistemology of Ibn Khaldun New York RoutledgeCurzon ISBN 978 0 415 61275 3 Umar Ibn Al Khattab 2 Volumes Umar Ibn Al Khattab 5 February 2017 Umar Ibn Al Khattab 2 Volumes Full text of Ibn Khaldun s Historiography archive org Retrieved 25 April 2018 How Far Are We From The Slippery Slope The Laffer Curve Revisited by Mathias Trabandt and Harald Uhlig NBER Working Paper No 15343 September 2009 Laffer Arthur The Laffer Curve Past Present and Future The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 4 July 2012 Brederode Robert F van 2009 Systems of general sales taxation theory policy and practice Austin Tex Wolters Kluwer Law amp Business p 117 ISBN 978 90 411 2832 4 a b c d e f Simon Robert 2002 Ibn Khaldun History as Science and the Patrimonial Empire Budapest Akademiai Kiado pp 18 20 22 24 ISBN 978 963 05 7934 6 a b c Alatas Syed Farid 2013 Ibn Khaldun New Delhi Oxford University Press pp 106 09 ISBN 978 0 19 809045 8 Fischel Walter 1952 Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane Their Historic Meeting in Damascus A D 1401 A H 803 Los Angeles University of California Press Enan Muhammed Abdullah 2007 Ibn Khaldun His Life and Works The Other Press p 118 ISBN 978 983 9541 53 3 Enan Muhammed Abdullah 2007 Ibn Khaldun His Life and Works The Other Press pp 118 19 ISBN 978 983 9541 53 3 Enan Muhammed Abdullah 2007 Ibn Khaldun His Life and Works The Other Press pp 119 20 ISBN 978 983 9541 53 3 Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th ed vol 9 p 148 Ernest Gellner Plough Sword and Book 1988 p 239 Arthur Laffer 1 June 2004 The Laffer Curve Past Present and Future Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on 1 December 2007 Retrieved 11 December 2007 Krugman Paul 26 August 2013 Opinion The Decline of E Empires The New York Times F R N Nabarro A S Argon 1996 Egon Orowan 1901 1989 A Biographical Memoir PDF Washington D C National Academies Press A Lakhsassi 1996 25 Ibn Khaldun In S H Nasr O Leaman eds History of Islamic Philosophy London Routledge pp 350 64 a b 2008 Ibn Khaldun Essay Contest www atlasusa Atlas Economic Research Foundation Archived from the original on 12 September 2008 Encounter of Civilizations Ibn Khaldun Exhibit Opens at Headquarters un org United Nations Retrieved 25 April 2018 McFadden Robert D 2 October 1981 Reagan Cites Islamic Scholar The New York Times Gates Warren E 1967 The Spread of Ibn Khaldun s Ideas on Climate and Culture Journal of the History of Ideas 28 3 415 22 doi 10 2307 2708627 JSTOR 2708627 Dhaouadi M 1 September 1990 Ibn Khaldun The Founding Father Of Eastern Sociology International Sociology 5 3 319 35 doi 10 1177 026858090005003007 S2CID 143508326 Haddad L 1 May 1977 A Fourteenth Century Theory of Economic Growth And Development Kyklos 30 2 195 213 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6435 1977 tb02006 x Sources Edit Fuad Baali 2005 The science of human social organization Conflicting views on Ibn Khaldun s 1332 1406 Ilm al umran Mellen studies in sociology Lewiston NY Edwin Mellen Press Boulakia Jean David C 1971 Ibn Khaldun A Fourteenth Century Economist Journal of Political Economy 79 5 1105 1118 doi 10 1086 259818 JSTOR pss 1830276 S2CID 144078253 Walter Fischel 1967 Ibn Khaldun in Egypt His public functions and his historical research 1382 1406 a study in Islamic historiography Berkeley University of California Press Allen Fromherz 2010 Ibn Khaldun Life and Times Edinburgh University Press 2010 Ana Maria C Minecan 2012 El vinculo comunitario y el poder en Ibn Jaldun in Jose Miguel Marinas Ed Pensar lo politico Ensayos sobre comunidad y conflicto Biblioteca Nueva Madrid 2012 Mahmoud Rabi 1967 The political theory of Ibn Khaldun Leiden E J Brill Robert Simon 2002 Ibn Khaldun History as science and the patrimonial empire Translated by Klara Pogatsa Budapest Akademiai Kiado Original edition 1999 Weiss Dieter 1995 Ibn Khaldun on Economic Transformation International Journal of Middle East Studies Cambridge University Press 27 1 29 37 doi 10 1017 S0020743800061560 JSTOR 176185 S2CID 162022220 Further reading EditMalise Ruthven The Otherworldliness of Ibn Khaldun review of Robert Irwin Ibn Khaldun An Intellectual Biography Princeton University Press 2018 ISBN 9780691174662 243 pp The New York Review of Books vol LXVI no 2 7 February 2019 pp 23 24 26 More than six centuries after Ibn Khaldun s death the modern world has much to learn from studying him After the Muqaddima itself Irwin s intellectual biography is an excellent place to begin External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ibn Khaldun Wikiquote has quotations related to Ibn Khaldun Arabic Wikisource has original text related to this article Ibn Khaldun English Edit Ibn Khaldun His Life and Work by Muhammad Hozien Ibn Khaldun on In Our Time at the BBC Rosenthal Franz 2008 1970 80 Ibn Khaldun Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography Encyclopedia com Complete Muqaddimah Kitab al Ibar in English without Chapter V 13 The Tunisian American Center US Archived 16 April 2013 at archive today Ibn Khaldun on the Web Muslim Scientists and Scholars Ibn Khaldun Ibn Khaldun s Philosophy of Management and Work Ibn Khaldun al Muqaddimah Methodology amp concepts of economic sociology Ibn Khaldun The Mediterranean in the 14th century Rise and fall of Empires Andalusian Legacy exhibition in the Alcazar of Seville The Ibn Khaldun Community Service Award c Archived 25 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Ibn Khaldun meets Al Saud The Ibn Khaldun Institute Archived 12 September 2014 at archive today The Tunisian American Day c Archived 25 February 2021 at the Wayback MachineNon English Edit Multilingual tunisian academic web site on Ibn Khaldun in French Expose simplifie sur la theologie scolastique Chapters from the Muqaddimah and the History of Ibn Khaldun in Arabic Ismail Kupeli Ibn Khaldun und das politische System Syriens Eine Gegenuberstellung Munchen 2007 ISBN 978 3 638 75458 3 German e book about the politics of Syria with reference to the political theory of Ibn Khaldun Kuchinov A M Ibn Khaldun influence on social thought development Lomonosov 2013 Moscow 2013 In Russian Master s thesis on Ibn Khaldun published by FFLCH USP in 2017 Roschel Renato Sao Paulo 2017 In Portuguese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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