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On the Interpretation of the Term “Futuwwa” in Persian fotovvatnamehs

2015
This paper will attempt to present the reasons the term "futuwwa" interpreted in a different way in medieval treatises. Alongside linguistically correct etymologies of the term, some treatises also mention such etymologies which could only have religious and political background.
exaly   +2 more sources

Futuwwa Traditions in the Ottoman Empire Akhis, Bektashi Dervishes, and Craftsmen

Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 1953
WHEN 'the adventurous traveler of Tangier, Abu Abd Allah Ibn Battuta, arrived at Attalia in the beginning of his Anatolian tour early in 1333 and took up his residence in the Moslem seminary of the town, he was visited by a young Turk of unpretentious appearance who invited him and his company to dinner.1 The Moroccan traveler's attitude was one of ...
G G Arnakis
exaly   +2 more sources

Shī‘itisation of theFutuwwaTradition in the Fifteenth Century

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, 2013
This study examines the Shi'itisation of the futuwwa tradition from the eleventh century to the early sixteenth century, with a special reference to fifteenth-century events. Available scholarship has a rather generalised view on the sectarian orientation of the futuwwa, locating it within the Sunni fold, though having a slightly Shi'ite tinge.
openaire   +2 more sources

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