Virtue, Piety and the Law
Publisher,Brill Academic Pub
Publication Date,
Format, Hardcover
Weight, 52163.08 g
No. of Pages, 266
In Virtue, Piety and the Law Katharina Ivanyi examines Birgivåi Meòhmed Efendåi's (d. 981/1573) al-òTaråiqa al-muòhammadiyya, a major work of pietist exhortation and advice, composed by the sixteenth-century Ottoman jurist, òHadåith scholar and grammarian, who would articulate a style of religiosity that had considerable reformist appeal into modern times. Linking the cultivation of individual virtue to questions of wider political, social and economic concern, Birgivåiplayed a significant role in the negotiation and articulation of early modern Ottoman òHanafåipiety. Birgivåi's deep mistrust of the passions of the human soul led him to prescribe a regime of self-surveillance and control that was only matched in rigor by his likewise exacting interpretation of the law in matters of everyday life, as much as in state practices, such as the cash waqf, Ottoman land tenure and taxation--