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Articles
Gunpowder and Guns
Building of Chichen Itza
Rise of Madrasas
Domesday Survey
Rise of Courtly Love
Signing of the Magna Carta
Travels of Marco Polo
Witchcraft
Pilgrimage to Mecca

Other Elements
Publisher's Note
Index
Table of Contents

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Great Events from History: The Middle Ages

Editors: Brian A. Pavlac, King's College (Wilkes-Barre, Pa.), Byron Cannon, David A. Crain, Jeffrey W. Dippmann, Catherine Cymone Fourshey, Richard N. Frye, Katherine Anne Harper, Franklin Ng, John A. Nichols, and Herbert Plutschow
ISBN: 978-1-58765-167-0
List Price: $175

November 2004 · 2 volumes · 1,010 pages · 8"x10"

Includes Free Online Access Through 12/31/2011

Great Events from History: The Middle Ages
The Rise of Madrasas

From the tenth through the beginning of the twelfth century, a system of self-contained and privately funded institutions of higher learning called Madrasas appeared throughout the Islamic world, becoming centers for the production of knowledge and normative practices in Islamic society.

Locale: Iraq and throughout the Islamic world
Categories: Cultural and intellectual history; education; laws, acts and
     legal history; organizations and institutions; religion; science
     and technology

Key Figure
Nizām al-Mulk (1018 or 1019-1092), Seljuk state executive officer and
     famous patron of madrasas

Summary of Event
The rise of the madrasa system marked the confluence and culmination of several defining aspects of medieval Islamic culture, among these traditions of rigorous scholarly inquiry, the rise of specifically Islamic forms of jurisprudence and the fields of intellectual activity which complemented and assisted these, and the practice of pious personal donation as a form of worship. The madrasas became sites for the production of knowledge, and for the production of a knowledgeable subculture, that of the ulama. As medieval Muslim intellectual and religious life took shape, it was in the madrasa that the character of these would be determined, and in which the range of questions which could be legitimately posed, pondered and answered within Islamic society was effectively circumscribed.

The advent of the madrasa system took place as part of a series of developments in medieval Islamic learning. Since the eighth and ninth centuries (second and third centuries) groups of scholars had met in mosques throughout the Islamic world to discuss matters crucial to the formation of an Islamic identity and community. These meetings of study circles, which were known as a halaq (singular halqa) or majalis (singular majlis), were presided over by an acknowledge teacher or authority in topics of formal religious study, those of law, hadith, or the sayings of the Prophet, and Qur'anic commentary and interpretation. These "Islamic sciences" were set in opposition to the "foreign sciences" of philosophy and rational inquiry into the natural world, both of which represented the intellectual legacy of the Hellenistic world.

During the ninth century, four "schools" or madhabs of Islamic law--the Shafi`i, Hanafi, Malika and Hanbali--developed separate but equally orthodox modes of legal interpretation among Sunni Muslims. As the doctrine of these schools evolved as part of widespread advancements in Islamic law, the study of law itself became more complicated. Legal education thus requited more intensive and more prolonged efforts on the part of students, and steady, stable venues for their teachers. Thus the study and teaching of the increasingly complex nuances of Islamic law each became full-time vocations.

Over time, hostels for students and teachers known as khans sprang up in proximity to mosques in which legal studies took place. In this way, local communities of scholars and students took shape, and students and masters from around the Muslim world were able to come together, thus fostering continuity of legal theory and practice. Khans were frequently built as communal gifts by rich Muslims. Such foundations combined the imperatives of local hospitality--khans were frequently at the disposal of travelers and pilgrims as well as students and teachers--with the religious obligations enjoined upon Muslims regarding the sharing of wealth with other Muslims.

The advent of the madrasa system proper is perhaps best understood as the intersection of the educational trends we have been describing with the distinctively Islamic institution known as the waqf. From the time of the earliest Arab conquests, one question that consistently confronted the Muslim community was the disposal of communal wealth and the rights and obligations of individual Muslims with regard to the needs of other individual Muslims and the Muslim community as a whole. Among the doctrines which evolved out of these concerns was that of the waqf. A waqf is and was a pious donation to the community of Muslims of private funds. Often these funds went to fund mosques, libraries, Sufi monasteries, or hospitals to ransom prisoners of war, or were given as simple alms for the poor. The religious objective in making such a donation was to attain greater "nearness" to God. Of course, other, more worldly objectives might prompt the donor as well. For whatever reason a waqf donation was made, however, its purpose and conditions could be laid out very specifically by the donor prior to the giving of the gift, but once the capital was turned over to its overseer (typically a respected qadi or judge), the waqf became "like an emancipated slave," free of its founder's direct control.

Increasingly during the tenth and eleventh century, waqf donations were earmarked for the foundation of what came to be known as a madrasa (literally "a place of study"). This trend was exemplified by the foundation of madrasa complexes throughout the heartlands of the Islamic empire, and especially in Iraq by the powerful Seljuk executive officer Nizām al-Mulk (d.1092). Among Nizām's most noteworthy foundations was the Madrasa Nizamiya in the intellectual hub of Baghdad, which was an immensely rich and prestigious institution that attracted the brightest and most revered scholars in Islam and that also housed vast collections of books.

The madrasa as it now developed combined the elements of the majlis and khan, and became a venue in which students and teachers alike could take up more or less permanent residence. The conditions of the waqf foundations varied from madrasa to madrasa--sometimes they provided a salary for teachers and stipends for students, sometimes only salaries for teachers, sometimes only the physical facilities themselves. It was not uncommon for the funds associated with the madrasa's initial foundation to derive from an orchard or some other form of productive capital.

The madrasa itself was devoted first and foremost to the study and transmission of Islamic law, although such subsidiary (and necessary) pursuits as the study of Arabic grammar, prophetic tradition and Qur'anic commentary might also be taught. The method of instruction was typically a lecture by a respected master of a given field of knowledge, during which his students would surround him and take notes. The master would frequently recite from memory his own works on questions of jurisprudence, religious doctrine, traditions of the Prophet, or other topics. In addition, he would cite, also from memory, important works of other masters, including his own teachers. Memory was highly prized in this setting, and students were encouraged to memorize the knowledge they "collected" and free themselves of the need for the written word.

Although within the madrasa the study of Islamic law was exalted above all other pursuits, including the study of literature and the "foreign sciences," these realms of knowledge systematically made their way back into the madrasa through the extracurricular activities of resident students and teachers who studied these "lesser" disciplines away from the madrasa. In this way, the methods and modes of disputation encountered in Greek philosophy, for example, affected profoundly (if covertly) the discussion and debate of points of Islamic law. Similarly, histories, biographies and other works of belles-lettres literature were read to enhance the student and teacher's imagination and capacity for analogous reasoning.

Learning was understood as a life-long process, and there are numerous anecdotes which depict famous Muslim scholars taking the time on their deathbeds to learn one last prophetic saying or one last poem. Once a student had mastered one science, there were always more to study and always more knowledge to acquire. Learning was thought to leave its imprint upon the individual, and through diligent study individuals were understood to refine themselves and become better Muslims and more honorable social beings. As one scholar put it, learning shone out from the learned man and not only illuminated those around him, but marked him as a communal exemplar.

Perhaps the most important function of the madrasa from the point of view of the Islamic community was that it served as a venue for the creation of consensus in a society ruled by custom and common public assent. Medieval Islamic society had no organizing bodies with which to produce such consensus, or with which to interpret or refine custom. In other societies, such functions may be fulfilled by ecclesiastical hierarchies or by formal public judicial bodies. In medieval society, questions of law and normative custom were regulated by a dialectical process by which propositions were either popularly assented to or objected to. The madrasa became the site in which the legal scholars whose voice was authoritative in such matters debated matters of custom and law, and in which they determined the acceptability or permissibility of thousands upon thousands of questions and propositions large and small, all of which would manifest themselves in the day-to-day lives of millions of Muslims over the space of generations.

Significance
During the centuries of the Crusades, and following the overthrow of the Shiite governments of the eastern Muslim world in the tenth and eleventh centuries, the madrasa became a center for the production of specifically Sunni, and increasingly militant, ideologies. During the same period and in later centuries, the madrasa was also a site for the forging of relationships between what were often non-Arab ruling elites and the intellectual and spiritual leaders of the communities over whom they held sway. Thus despite the inherent separation between madrasas and secular leaders, they became and would remain crucial meeting points between the worldly power of their founders and patrons and the spiritual and moral authority wielded by the scholars whose work they fostered.

Thomas Sizgorich

Further Reading
Berkey, Jonathan. The Transmission of Knowledge in Medieval Cairo: A Social History of Islamic Education. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1992. A concise and vivid study of the relationship between secular elites and institutions of learning and culture in medieval Cairo.

Leiser, Gary. "The Madrasa and the Islamization of the Middle East: The Case of Egypt." Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 22 (1985): 29-47. A study of the role played by madrasa institutions in producing and disseminating "Islamic" identity and communal mores.

_______. "Notes on the Madrasa in Medieval Islamic Society." The Muslim World 73 (1983): 165-181. Considers the situation of the early madrasa system in its historical and social setting.

Makdisi, G. The Rise of the Colleges: Institutions of Learning In Islam and the West. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1981. The standard work on the rise of the madrasa and one of the foremost works on the intellectual culture to which the madrasa was home.

_______. Religion, Law, and Learning in Classical Islam. Hampsire, U.K.: Variorum, 1991. These collected articles of George Makdisi represent the evolution of his scholarship regarding the intellectual milieu in which the madrasa system was born. An indispensable source.

See Also
Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī; Nizā m al-Mulk.

Related Articlesin Great Lives from History: The Middle Ages, 477-1453: 610, Muhammed Receives Revelation; 630-711, Islam Spreads Through North Africa; 637-657, Islam Expands Throughout Middle East; 680, Martyrdom of Husayn; 1095, Pope Urban II Calls the First Crusade.


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