Monsoon Islam: Trade and Faith on the Medieval Malabar Coast

Monsoon Islam: Trade and Faith on the Medieval Malabar Coast

Western scholars of Islam and its myriad civilizations have long qualified the religion by many geographical and cultural subheadings: African Islam, folk Islam, urban Islam, or the like. This is the first academic attempt to analyze Islam through the lens of a weather pattern. Prange looks at India’s Malabar Coast, bilad al-filfil (land of pepper), so named by Arab merchants who arrived on the monsoon trade winds beginning even before the first Islamic century. He argues that Islamic expression there and at the far ends of all its commercial traces on the Indian Ocean littoral is a synthesis explained by the seasonality of these traders’ arrivals and departures, permanent settlements, and their commercial and personal interactions among Hindu and fellow Muslim South Indians. By all readings, Prange’s analysis is a success.

Monsoon Islam: Trade and Faith on the Medieval Malabar Coast
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