Rethinking Rural Communities and Tribalism in Islamic Lands (6th –10th / 12th –16th Centuries) (17-18/12/25)

 

Organising committee: Prof. Jo Van Steenbergen (Ghent University), Prof. Malika Dekkiche (Antwerp University), Dr. Zacharie Mochtari de Pierrepont (Ghent University)

Venue: Ghent University, Blandijnberg 2, 6th floor, room 6.60

Date: 17 and 18 December 2025

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rethinking Rural Communities and Tribalism in Islamic Lands (6th –10th / 12th –16th Centuries)

Rural communities and tribal formations have long been integral to the social and economic fabric of the premodern Islamic world. Yet, despite their significance, the complexities of their histories and internal dynamics have received comparatively limited scholarly attention relative to urban settings. The workshop, Rethinking Rural Communities and Tribalism in Islamic Lands (6th-9th/12th-15th centuries) seeks to address this imbalance by critically examining not only the lived realities, adaptive strategies, and agency of rural populations and tribal groups within Islamic societies, but also the ways in which their histories have been written, represented, and conceptualized.

Recent academic studies have highlighted the village as a focal point for identity construction and collective memory, as well as the entangled relationships that developed among rural populations, their elites, and governing authorities. Tribalism, frequently characterized as a static or divisive phenomenon, is instead approached here as a dynamic and persistent social phenomenon that deserves to be better understood and analyzed. In the context of the premodern Islamic world, tribal affiliations have shaped systems of authority, economic interaction, and social cohesion from the early Islamic period through the medieval era and beyond. Rather than representing vestiges of a bygone era, both tribes and rural communities have demonstrated considerable adaptability in response to shifting political and economic conditions, negotiating degrees of autonomy, resisting various forms of exploitation, and functioning as essential intermediaries between state power and local society.

This workshop seeks to foster a reassessment of the roles played by rural and tribal actors, encouraging new analytical perspectives and methodological approaches within the broader field of premodern Islamic studies.

program

Day 1 Wednesday 17th – Conceptualising Tribalism and Rural Communities

 08:50 | Welcome

09:10–09:20 | Opening RemarksZacharie Mochtari de Pierrepont (Ghent University)

Session I – Concepts and Frameworks of Tribal and Rural Societies
Chair: Christopher Markiewicz (Ghent University)

09:20–10:10 | Yossef Rapoport (Queen Mary University of London)
Should we still speak about tribes? Arabic terms for families, clans, and tribes in medieval Islamic sources

10:10–11:00 | Amira Bennison (University of Cambridge)
The Reconfiguration of Rural Communities and Tribes in the Thirteenth-Century Western Maghrib

11:00–11:15 | Break

11:15–12:05 | Boris James (Montpellier-3 University)
Tribal Cast or Military Aristocracy: What are Medieval Kurdish Groups Made Of?

12:05–13:30 | Lunch

Session II – Rural–Urban networks, state formation and political authority

Chair: Malika Dekkiche (Antwerp University)

13:30–14:20 | Zacharie Mochtari de Pierrepont (Ghent University)
“The ‘tribal enclave’ of Bayt Husayn: rural communities, tribes and authority in Rasūlid Yemen”

14:20–15:10 | Elise Voguet (CNRS)
“Nomads and Settlers in the Touat: Local Authority and Taxation in the Sahara (14th–15th Centuries)”

15:10–15:25 | Break

15:25–16:15 | Michael Hope (Yonsei University)
Rural elites and the State under the Ilkhanids: negotiating power on the Mongol imperial western frontier (title to be confirmed)

16:15-16:20 | End of day 1, concluding remarks Zacharie Mochtari de Pierrepont (Ghent University)

 

Day 2 – Case studies & comparative perspectives

08:50 | Welcome

Session III – Tribes, Rural Societies, and Imperial Strategies

Chair: John Latham Sprinkle (Vrije University Brussel)

09:00 | Georg Leube (University of Bayreuth)
“Petrified Social Infrastructure? Monumental Epigraphy as an Interface Structuring Urban–Rural Entanglements in the Qaraquyunlu and Aqquyunlu ‘Turkmen’ Realms of the Fifteenth Century CE

09:50 | Yoan Parrot (Aix-Marseille University)
“A nomadic landscape: Turkmen’s domination over rural areas (Syria, Anatolia and Caucasus, 14th-15th century)”

10:40–10:55 | Break

10:55–11:45 | Nicolas Michel (Aix-Marseille University)
“Bedouin/ʿUrbān in Sixteenth-Century Egypt: What We Know, What We Don’t”

11:45-12:00 | Closing RemarksJan Dumolyn (Ghent University)

Session IV – Comparative and connected perspective: toward a new conceptual and practical framework?

14:00-16:00: Round Table

16:00-16:10 | Final Remarks – Zacharie Mochtari de Pierrepont (Ghent University)