Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire

The most famous dissenter of the Umayyad times in Spain, Umar ibn Hafsûn (act. 880-917) actually turned out to be described as an ‘outlaw’ in the historical works of the xixth century. Why? The path of the inquiry leads to José Antonio Conde (1768-1820) and Reinhart Dozy (1821-1881). According to Co...

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Autor principal: Gabriel Martinez-Gros
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Publicado: Université de Provence 2011
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/d02a84908a0546009c657666c2b8a766
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:d02a84908a0546009c657666c2b8a7662021-12-02T10:06:16ZIbn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire0997-13272105-227110.4000/remmm.7132https://doaj.org/article/d02a84908a0546009c657666c2b8a7662011-07-01T00:00:00Zhttp://journals.openedition.org/remmm/7132https://doaj.org/toc/0997-1327https://doaj.org/toc/2105-2271The most famous dissenter of the Umayyad times in Spain, Umar ibn Hafsûn (act. 880-917) actually turned out to be described as an ‘outlaw’ in the historical works of the xixth century. Why? The path of the inquiry leads to José Antonio Conde (1768-1820) and Reinhart Dozy (1821-1881). According to Conde, Ibn Hafsun’s rebellion echoes to the Spanish popular guerrilla against Napoleon, that the French and their supporters – Conde among them – used to discredit as ‘outlaws’. According to Dozy, Ibn Hafsûn is a remote ancestor of the Andalusian outlaw character, made popular by the European writers and travellers to Spain in the first part of the xixth century. In this way, philological craftsmanship was united to literary acquaintance and so paved the way to a self-proclaimed historical truth.Gabriel Martinez-GrosUniversité de ProvencearticlehistoriographyIbn ḤafṣûnJosé Antonio CondeReinhart DozyUmayyads of SpainHistory of AfricaDT1-3415Social sciences (General)H1-99ENFRRevue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée, Vol 129, Pp 139-152 (2011)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
topic historiography
Ibn Ḥafṣûn
José Antonio Conde
Reinhart Dozy
Umayyads of Spain
History of Africa
DT1-3415
Social sciences (General)
H1-99
spellingShingle historiography
Ibn Ḥafṣûn
José Antonio Conde
Reinhart Dozy
Umayyads of Spain
History of Africa
DT1-3415
Social sciences (General)
H1-99
Gabriel Martinez-Gros
Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
description The most famous dissenter of the Umayyad times in Spain, Umar ibn Hafsûn (act. 880-917) actually turned out to be described as an ‘outlaw’ in the historical works of the xixth century. Why? The path of the inquiry leads to José Antonio Conde (1768-1820) and Reinhart Dozy (1821-1881). According to Conde, Ibn Hafsun’s rebellion echoes to the Spanish popular guerrilla against Napoleon, that the French and their supporters – Conde among them – used to discredit as ‘outlaws’. According to Dozy, Ibn Hafsûn is a remote ancestor of the Andalusian outlaw character, made popular by the European writers and travellers to Spain in the first part of the xixth century. In this way, philological craftsmanship was united to literary acquaintance and so paved the way to a self-proclaimed historical truth.
format article
author Gabriel Martinez-Gros
author_facet Gabriel Martinez-Gros
author_sort Gabriel Martinez-Gros
title Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
title_short Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
title_full Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
title_fullStr Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
title_full_unstemmed Ibn Ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
title_sort ibn ḥafsûn ou la construction d’un bandit populaire
publisher Université de Provence
publishDate 2011
url https://doaj.org/article/d02a84908a0546009c657666c2b8a766
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