Imperialism through Islamic Networks

In 1848 a Russian subject named Kasym Mamad died in Arabia while performing the hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca. Mamad was a native of the South Caucasus, a region Russia had recently conquered through wars with the Ottoman Empire and Persia. Like most Muslims traveling overland to Mecca...

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description In 1848 a Russian subject named Kasym Mamad died in Arabia while performing the hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca. Mamad was a native of the South Caucasus, a region Russia had recently conquered through wars with the Ottoman Empire and Persia. Like most Muslims traveling overland to Mecca at this time, Mamad made the long trip as part of a caravan, a procession of people and animals. He took a route that Muslims from the Caucasus, Sunnis and Shi‘is, had followed for centuries. It wound through eastern Anatolia and northern Syria down to Damascus, the departure point for
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source Project MUSE Open Access Books; De Gruyter Open Access Books; OAPEN; DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books
subjects Anthropology
Applied sciences
Asian history
Asian studies
Behavioral sciences
Christianity
Civil service
Consulates
Consuls
Diplomats
Embassies
Engineering
Ethnic groups
Ethnography
Ethnology
Ethnoreligious groups
European history
Foreign affairs
Foreign service
Government
Government bureaucracy
Government forms
Government issued identification
Hajj
Imperialism
International politics
International relations
Islam
Islamic philosophy
Muslims
Orthodox Church
Ottoman Empire
Passports
Pilgrimages
Political ideologies
Political philosophy
Political science
Politics
Practical theology
Public administration
Religion
Religious practices
Spiritual belief systems
Theology
Traffic
Transportation
Western Asian history
title Imperialism through Islamic Networks
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