Jump to book subject area navigation Jump to general navigation Jump to start of page content
Search   
non fiction 

 

The Court of the Caliphs

Hugh Kennedy

Intrigue, debauchery and seduction in the palaces of the Middle East

*

Reviews

  

From a rebellion planned in a remote desert town to the founding of Baghdad in AD 762, the rule of the Abbasid dynasty was looked back on as the golden era of the Islamic Conquest.
The Caliphs formed the model for succeeding muslim regimes. From military conquests to patronizing poetry, building palaces, and the formal structure of the court - harems, viziers, eunuchs and the tales of the Arabian Nights - the Abbasid caliphate offered a historical ideal for later empires and their rulers to aspire to.
Yet the true story of this fascinating empire has been forgotten outside the academic world. And it deserves to be rescued: it is an epic story in every sense, with larger-than-life rulers, exotic slave girls, inventive tortures, and enough court intrigue to frighten a Borgia.

 

'a remarkable narrative history of the Abbasids is...a major event and should be required reading for the Washington neocons and their Islamist theocon adversaries...[a] lively and compelling study.'

William Dalrymple

THE TIMES (4.9.04)

*Read more reviews

 

The Court of the Caliphs

Buy The Court of the Caliphs from Amazon
£9.99
Paperback
352 pages
216 x 135 mm
ISBN-10: 0753818965
ISBN-13: 9780753818961
Publication: November 2005
'the court of the caliphs' is also available in hardback format
  Orion Group Publishing logo - link to home page Reading Room * * *