BBC Radio 4 (IN OUR TIME): IBN KHALDUN (AUDIO): http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00qckbw
Melvyn Bragg and guests Robert Hoyland, Robert Irwin and Hugh
Kennedy discuss the life and ideas of the 14th-century Arab philosopher
of history Ibn Khaldun. Ibn Khaldun was a North African statesman who
retreated into the desert in 1375. He emerged having written one of the
most important ever studies of the workings of history.Khaldun was born
in Tunis in 1332. He received a supremely good education, but at 16
lost many of his family to the Black Death. His adult life was
similarly characterised by sharp turns of fortune. He built a career as
a political operator in cities from Fez to Granada. But he often fared
badly in court intrigues, was imprisoned and failed to prevent the
murder of a fellow statesman. In 1375, he withdrew into the Sahara to
work out why the Muslim world had degenerated into division and
decline. Four years later, he had completed not only a history of North
African politics but also, in the book's long introduction, one of the
great studies of history. Drawing on both regional history and personal
experience, he set out a bleak analysis of the rise and fall of
dynasties. He argued that group solidarity was vital to success in
power. Within five generations, though, this always decayed. Tired
urban dynasties inevitably became vulnerable to overthrow by rural
insurgents. Later in life, Ibn Khaldun worked as a judge in Egypt, and
in 1401 he met the terrifying Mongol conqueror Tamburlaine, whose
triumphs, Ibn Khaldun felt, bore out his pessimistic theories. Over the
last three centuries Ibn Khaldun has been rediscovered as a profoundly
prescient political scientist, philosopher of history and forerunner of
sociology - one of the great thinkers of the Muslim world.Robert
Hoyland is Professor of Islamic History at the University of Oxford;
Robert Irwin is Senior Research Associate of the School of Oriental and
African Studies at the University of London; Hugh Kennedy is Professor
of Arabic in the School of Oriental and African Studies at the
University of London.
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