History Of The Arab Philip K. Hitti Pdf __hot__ Now
: He describes pre-Islamic Arabia not as a vacuum, but as a "diverse and complex" society with rich traditions in poetry and trade that laid the groundwork for future Arab identity.
The Enduring Legacy of Philip K. Hitti’s History of the Arabs
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He chronicles the rapid expansion of the Arab-Islamic empire, explaining how a desert people conquered vast territories stretching from Spain to India. history of the arab philip k. hitti pdf
The book has gone through ten editions. Digital archives often host older, public-domain editions or library-scanned versions that are easier to access in regions where physical copies are expensive or rare.
One reviewer famously noted that Hitti writes "with the authority of a judge and the clarity of a journalist." For a dense academic text, History of the Arabs is remarkably readable. He uses vivid anecdotes—like the story of the pre-Islamic poet Imru' al-Qais or the lavish court of Harun al-Rashid—to illustrate broad historical trends.
Hitti’s unique perspective—born in Ottoman-controlled Lebanon and educated in the West—allowed him to bridge the gap between Eastern primary sources and Western academic rigor. His magnum opus, History of the Arabs , was the result of a decade of meticulous research, drawing from thousands of Arabic manuscripts. Why This Book Matters : He describes pre-Islamic Arabia not as a
His academic career was historic. After teaching at his alma mater in Beirut, Hitti was offered a chair at Princeton University, where he became a dominant figure in the field. At a time when the study of the Middle East was still in its infancy in the West, Hitti almost single-handedly created the discipline of Arabic studies in the United States. During World War II, he even taught Arabic to American servicemen through the Army Specialized Training Program. He was not just a scholar; he was a pioneer, bridging two worlds and translating a complex, ancient civilization for a modern, Western audience.
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Hitti's educational journey was as remarkable as his academic output. He was first educated at an American Presbyterian mission school before attending the Syrian Protestant College (later the American University of Beirut), from which he graduated in 1908. After teaching in Lebanon, he moved to the United States, eventually earning his PhD in history from Columbia University in 1915. Following a return to Lebanon after World War I, he was offered a chair at Princeton University in February 1926 — a position he held until his retirement in 1954. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted
The narrative shifts dramatically with the life of the Prophet Muhammad and the birth of Islam in the 7th century. Hitti meticulously chronicles the early Islamic conquests under the Orthodox Caliphs (the Rashidun). He explains how a newly unified force swiftly defeated the Byzantine and Persian Empires, two of the world's reigning superpowers. 3. The Umayyad Empire: Damascus
Unlike many modern texts that focus solely on the Caliphates or the modern era, Hitti provides a seamless narrative. He starts with geography and pre-Islamic poetry, moves through the Prophet Muhammad’s life, the Umayyad and Abbasid dynasties, the Crusades, the Mongol invasion, and finally, the rise of the Ottoman Empire and the stirrings of modern nationalism.
It is important to read History of the Arabs with an understanding of its context.
Philip Khuri Hitti (1886–1978) was a Lebanese-American scholar who essentially created the field of Arab studies in the United States. While teaching at Princeton University, Hitti recognized that Western audiences lacked a comprehensive, scholarly, yet accessible account of Arab history—from the pre-Islamic era through the rise of Islam to the Ottoman period. The Scope of the Work
„wiegt“?
Ich mag ja die deutsche Sprache und auch blumige Umschreibungen, aber das Megabytes etwas wiegen sollen, ist nun doch etwas weit hergeholt.
Und doch gängig.
Die Daten wiegen sogar wirklich was: https://www.ellipsix.net/blog/2009/04/how-much-does-data-weigh.html
Das war mir neu, Nicolas.
Wieder etwas gelernt und Danke für eure Arbeit!
Auf dem Atari wurde mal ein Tool angepriesen (auf der CeBit vorgestellt), das gegen mögliche Unwucht der HD, „Ausgleichsbits“ auf die Platte schrieb!
Nachzulesen in ST-Magazin oder TOS 1991 oder 1992 (Aprilausgabe).
Nice! Wollte @“Janus“ darauf hinweisen, dass dies tatsächlich so ist, aber dass das Gewicht so enorm ist, dass es für eine Unwucht sorgen kann bei den damaligen riesigen Festplatten (ungefähr so groß wie zwei 13″ MBAs nebeneinander und pro MBA als Stapel darauf noch ca. 7 MBAs darauf aufgetürmt) mit enormem Speicherplatz von ca. 30MB, hatte ich nicht gedacht. Oder war das evtl. ein übersehener Aprilscherz? :)
@“Leser dieses Threads“: Entweder erlaubt sich @“Janus“ einen Scherz, oder ist tatsächlich damals auf den Aprilscherz hereingefallen. Wie ich physikalisch dachte, ist der Gewichtsunterschied schon damals so gering gewesen, dass dies natürlich keine Unwucht verursachen konnte (der erwähnte Blogartikel per Link von Nicolas erklärt dies sehr verständlich).
Ist doch umgangssprachlich eine völlig normale Formulierung
Nach dem Update wurde bei mir das iCloud Drive deaktiviert und alle Dateien in einen Ordner mit dem Namen „iCloud Drive (Archiv)“ verschoben.
Soeben dieses schnüffelnde Feature sicherheitshalber nochmals für alles deaktiviert.
Wie meinen?
?
Es ist ein Trauerspiel, was Apple bezüglich der MacOS-Thematik seit Jahren abliefert. Als jahrelanger MAC-Benutzer nutze ich sogar privat immer öfter Windows. Traurig traurig…..
Android-Geräte kommen bei mir allerdings nicht mal annähernd in die Tüte, das iPhone ist noch immer ungeschlagen gut.