Family bonds across the sea: the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Family bonds across the sea : the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa. / Gori, Alessandro.

In: Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen, Vol. 17, 2023, p. 40-69.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gori, A 2023, 'Family bonds across the sea: the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa', Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen, vol. 17, pp. 40-69. <http://www.cdmy.org/cmy/ncmy17_36.pdf>

APA

Gori, A. (2023). Family bonds across the sea: the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa. Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen, 17, 40-69. http://www.cdmy.org/cmy/ncmy17_36.pdf

Vancouver

Gori A. Family bonds across the sea: the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa. Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen. 2023;17:40-69.

Author

Gori, Alessandro. / Family bonds across the sea : the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa. In: Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen. 2023 ; Vol. 17. pp. 40-69.

Bibtex

@article{19debc46f9e243c6a51f5cce2d934726,
title = "Family bonds across the sea: the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa",
abstract = "Over the last twenty-five yearsthe Islamicworld in general, and Yemen in particular, has beenwitnessing a growing interest in genealogical research. The traditional science of nasab has experienced a revival thanks to an increasing number of editions of pre-modern and modern texts that are now widely circulating amongst scholars. Moreover, the use of digital supports, the internet and social media has also affected this field, prompting the rise of several dedicated websites, platforms, forums, Twitter channels and Facebook pages that are fully devoted to collecting, exchanging, and discussing genealogical documents.In this context, my paper conducts a comparative study of the genealogies of group of descendants ofʿAqīl b. Abī Ṭālib, present both in Yemen and in the Horn of Africa. By critically analysing the lineage of this group, I would like to draw a wider and at the same time more nuanced picture of the network of family bonds that almost physically connect Yemen to the Horn of Africa, and which play a crucial role in the history, culture, and society of both the Asian and African regions of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean.",
author = "Alessandro Gori",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "40--69",
journal = "Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Y{\'e}men",
issn = "2727-5221",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Family bonds across the sea

T2 - the ʿAqīlī/Zaylaʿī lineage connecting Yemen and the Horn of Africa

AU - Gori, Alessandro

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Over the last twenty-five yearsthe Islamicworld in general, and Yemen in particular, has beenwitnessing a growing interest in genealogical research. The traditional science of nasab has experienced a revival thanks to an increasing number of editions of pre-modern and modern texts that are now widely circulating amongst scholars. Moreover, the use of digital supports, the internet and social media has also affected this field, prompting the rise of several dedicated websites, platforms, forums, Twitter channels and Facebook pages that are fully devoted to collecting, exchanging, and discussing genealogical documents.In this context, my paper conducts a comparative study of the genealogies of group of descendants ofʿAqīl b. Abī Ṭālib, present both in Yemen and in the Horn of Africa. By critically analysing the lineage of this group, I would like to draw a wider and at the same time more nuanced picture of the network of family bonds that almost physically connect Yemen to the Horn of Africa, and which play a crucial role in the history, culture, and society of both the Asian and African regions of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean.

AB - Over the last twenty-five yearsthe Islamicworld in general, and Yemen in particular, has beenwitnessing a growing interest in genealogical research. The traditional science of nasab has experienced a revival thanks to an increasing number of editions of pre-modern and modern texts that are now widely circulating amongst scholars. Moreover, the use of digital supports, the internet and social media has also affected this field, prompting the rise of several dedicated websites, platforms, forums, Twitter channels and Facebook pages that are fully devoted to collecting, exchanging, and discussing genealogical documents.In this context, my paper conducts a comparative study of the genealogies of group of descendants ofʿAqīl b. Abī Ṭālib, present both in Yemen and in the Horn of Africa. By critically analysing the lineage of this group, I would like to draw a wider and at the same time more nuanced picture of the network of family bonds that almost physically connect Yemen to the Horn of Africa, and which play a crucial role in the history, culture, and society of both the Asian and African regions of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 40

EP - 69

JO - Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen

JF - Nouvelles Chroniques du Manuscrit au Yémen

SN - 2727-5221

ER -

ID: 377258602