Friday, 13 February 2015

The historical formation of Islamic law - Wednesday 18th February

The first Spring term meeting of the Ancient Law reading group will take place on Wednesday 18th February at 5pm in the Centre for Jewish Studies office which is Room 11 on the Lower Ground floor in the West Wing of the Samuel Alexander building.

Mehmet Ciftci will be leading a discussion on the historical formation of Islamic law. Below please find Mehmet's introductory comments ahead of the reading session:

"Ever more frequently we confront the need to understand Islamic law, not only to understand the actions of Muslims far away, but also those living in our midst. Without presuming any prior knowledge of this subject, I shall make a brief sketch of the historical formation of Islamic law from its four different sources, which continue to be the basis of Islamic law today: the Quran, the hadith, the consensus of the Islamic community and analogical reasoning. I also include a discussion of Shia Islam and of its differences from Sunni Islam. Finally, I have provided an excerpt from a recent fatwa written by a Sunni legal scholar to condemn the actions of ISIS, not only for its topical relevance, but also to give an example of Islamic law in practice."




Monday, 9 February 2015

Spring term 2015 schedule

The sessions require no prior preparations from the participants. A typical session involves the close reading of a short excerpt with the session leader orchestrating the discussion and introducing the participants to the linguistic and methodological issues of his/her own field. We are particularly interested in any points of comparison and contrast between the legal thought (and implications thereof) of different societies and encourage all approaches (e.g. philosophical, legal, socio-historical, philological, literary).

18 February, Wednesday 5pm
A114 (Samuel Alexander building)
The historical formation of Islamic law
(Mehmet Ciftci)
4 March, Wednesday 5pm
A114 (Samuel Alexander building)
Jewish ethics vs Jewish law - The Pirke de-Rabbi Eliezer
(Katharina Keim)
18 March, Wednesday 4pm
A18 (Samuel Alexander building)
Prostitution in Roman and Church law
(Rosie Jackson)
The reading group is open to all staff and students members of the university and beyond.

For further information, please visit our blog or contact Marton Ribary and Sam Jones: marton.ribary@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk and samuel.jones-2@manchester.ac.uk


Job, Moses, Aaron and Joshua from an Ethiopian manuscript
(15th-16th century CE, Gunda Gunde 440, ff. 15v-16r)