Mauro Nobili is Assistant Professor at the Department of History and the Center for African Studies at the University of Illinois. A historian of pre-colonial and early-colonial West Africa, he has published on West African chronicles and Arabic calligraphies including in the journal History of Africa. He has been the recipient of several prestigious awards, including a National Endowment for Humanities grant.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction; Part I. A Nineteenth Century Chronicle in Support of the Caliphate of Hamdall hi: N B. Al- hir's T r kh al-fatt sh: 1. A century of scholarship; 2. The T r kh al-fatt sh: a nineteenth-century chronicle; Part II. A Contested Space of Compating Claims: the Middle Niger, 1810s-1840s; 3. The emergence of clerical rule in the Middle Niger; 4. A mad Lobbo, Timbuktu, and the Kunta; 5. Fluctuating diplomacy: amdall hi and Sokoto; Part III. The Circulation and Reception of the T r kh al-fatt sh, 1840s-2010s: 6. The T r kh al-fatt sh at work; Conclusion.
Introduction; Part I. A Nineteenth Century Chronicle in Support of the Caliphate of Hamdall hi: N B. Al- hir's T r kh al-fatt sh: 1. A century of scholarship; 2. The T r kh al-fatt sh: a nineteenth-century chronicle; Part II. A Contested Space of Compating Claims: the Middle Niger, 1810s-1840s; 3. The emergence of clerical rule in the Middle Niger; 4. A mad Lobbo, Timbuktu, and the Kunta; 5. Fluctuating diplomacy: amdall hi and Sokoto; Part III. The Circulation and Reception of the T r kh al-fatt sh, 1840s-2010s: 6. The T r kh al-fatt sh at work; Conclusion.
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