“Becoming Muslim”

Author:

Insoll Timothy

Abstract

Archaeology is in a unique position to offer a material culture based perspective on Islamization and conversion to Islam, particularly in regions where historical sources might be limited or absent. This is explored with reference to two archaeological areas, Gao in Mali, and Harlaa in Ethiopia to assess if similar material markers can recur archaeologically through evaluating mosques, Muslim burials and Arabic epigraphy, settlement structure and domestic architecture, animal and plant remains, ceramics, and miscellaneous artifacts potentially suggestive of Islamization in both regions, primarily for the period between the 11th–13th centuries CE. It is concluded that the evidence from Gao and Harlaa attests the variety of interpretations of Islam that exist, but, correspondingly, through the recurrence of key markers such as mosques, Muslim burials, and Arabic epigraphy, also affirms material similarity, yet without having to make course to a unitary and erroneous concept of “African Islam.”

Publisher

Equinox Publishing

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

Reference108 articles.

1. Azaïs, R.P. and Chambard, R. 1931. Cinq années de recherches archéologiques en Ethiopie. Paris: Paul Geuthner.

2. Barrett-Jolley, S. 2000. “The faunal remains from Gao Ancien.” In Urbanism, Archaeology and Trade. Further Observations on the Gao Region (Mali), edited by T. Insoll. 45–55. British Archaeological Reports S829. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.

3. Bauden, F. 2011. “Inscriptions Arabes d’Éthiopie.” Annales Islamologiques 45: 285–306.

4. Beldados A. 2015. Paleoethnobotanical Study of Ancient Food Crops and the Environmental Context in Northeast Africa, 6000 B.C. to 200/300 AD. British Archaeological Reports S2706. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407313573

5. Beldados, A., E. H.Siraj, T. Insoll, E. Z. Eshetu and F. Angestrom. Submitted. “Archaeobotany, plant economy, palaeoenvironment, and religious identity in medieval eastern Ethiopia. The results of analysis from Harlaa, Dire Dawa region.” Annales d’Éthiopie.

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