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"This work is a comprehensive account and impressive analysis of an era within a city which incorporates those invaluable extras, often abandoned or discarded before the final submission, namely copious appendices and author's notes, a chronology, a list of major players, a bibliography of original source-texts, a chapter-by-chapter synopsis, all of which warrant the appreciation of his research readers and are tools to aid deeper and fuller exploration of an area now very much on the academic map... This book is destined to become a classic and an indispensible tome for the study of pre-Mongol Iran... It can only be hoped that this very impressive and inspiring work by David Durand-Guery will provide the incentive and motivation for further scholarly endeavour." - George Lane, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, JRAS, Series 3 - Volume 20/4 - 2010
"Durand-Guédy's book reflects several significant trends in recent research on early Islamic History. One is the emphasis on regional and urban history, which gives us a much more nuanced and credible understanding of the dynamic, interactive, and pragmatic political life of the period than older world written from an "imperial" point of view. Moreover, recent scholars tend to take the broadest possible approach to source material, and Durand-Guédy likewise makes good use not just of the standard corpus of historical text but also an array of chronicles, narrative histories, geographies, biographical dictionaries, poetry, and documents... for specialists it will be a welcome and highly informative addition to the scholarly literature." - Elton L. Daniel, University of Hawai'i Manoa (The American Historical Review, April 2011)
"[T]here is no doubt as to the value and importance of this work. It is a major contribution to our understanding of the neglected Saljuq period and the mediaeval history of Iran more generally and sheds fresh light on many neglected or misunderstood issues while handling an impressive array of sources with dexterity. Every library collection encompassing the premodern Middle East should certainly acquire a copy." - A. C. S. Peacock, British Institute at Ankara; International Journal of Asian Studies, 8(1) (2011): 114-6