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The<i>qāญī</i>'s<i>dīwān</i>(<i>sijill</i>) before the Ottomans

97

Citations

1

References

1998

Year

Abstract

Studies on Ottoman society and law through the so-called court sijills have lately proliferated, surpassing in volume all previous studies based on other archival sources, including tax and land registers. The comparatively massive size of these sijills , and the fact that their majority did survive, even in a good state, have led some scholars to the conclusion that only the Ottoman qāḍīs kept records of their court proceedings in a systematic fashion, and that they were the first to establish the sijill as a formal institution. Even those who do not share this view of a uniquely Ottoman achievement seem in no sense clear as to the pre-Ottoman history of this important institution. My purpose in this article, therefore, is to attempt to unravel some important aspects of the sijill 's history, including the less consequential issue of the terminological confusion which has engulfed it in modern scholarly discourse.

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