Al-Ibda’ Al-Zira’I Fi Bidayat Al-‘Alam Al-Islami
الإبداع الزراعي في بدايات العالم الإسلامي
Author: Watson, Andrew
أندريو واطسون
Edition:
1
Language:
Arabic,
Reference ID:
H2643
$30
Only 1 left in stock
DESCRIPTION
455 pp. of Arabic text; revised by Muhammad Nazir Sankari, translated by Ahmad Al-Ashkar; Paperback binding, publisher's original wrappers; index, footnotes, b/w photographs and figures; copy clean and in very good condition. This study describes and explains the revolutionary changes which transformed the agricultural life of the Islamicized world in the four centuries following the early Arab conquests. This study describes and explains the revolutionary changes which transformed the agricultural life of the Islamicized world in the four centuries following the early Arab conquests. Professor Watson discusses eighteen crops - from sorghum and rye to the watermelon - which spread through the Near East and North Africa during this period. This study describes and explains the revolutionary changes which transformed the agricultural life of the Islamicized world in the four centuries following the early Arab conquests. Professor Watson discusses eighteen crops - from sorghum and rye to the watermelon - which spread through the Near East and North Africa during this period. This study describes and explains the revolutionary changes which transformed the agricultural life of the Islamicized world in the four centuries following the early Arab conquests. Professor Watson discusses eighteen crops - from sorghum and rye to the watermelon - which spread through the Near East and North Africa during this period._x000d_ Contents: 1. Introduction, Part I. The chronology of diffusion: 2. Sorghum, 3. Asiatic rice, 4. Hard wheat, 5. Sugar cane, 6. Old World cotton, 7. Sour orange, lemon, lime, shaddock, 8. Banana, plantain, 9. Coconut palm, 10. Watermelon, 11. Spinach, 12. Artichoke, 13. Colocasia, 14. Eggplant, 15. Mango tree, Part II. The pathways of diffusion, 16. The routes, Part III. The mechanics of diffusion: 17. The agents, 18. A medium for diffusion, 19. The pull of demand, 20. Facilitating supply: irrigation, 21. Facilitating supply: land tenure, 22. Facilitating supply: gardens, Part IV. The new plants in the economy: 23. An agricultural revolution?, 24. Agriculture in its context, Part V. Later centuries: 25. Agriculture in retreat.