



- Writer: Joel Hayward
- Category: English
- Pages: 482
- Stock: In Stock
- Model: STP-14310
Most Islamic biographies deal with Muhammad’s
use of warfare by using an understandable but insufficient that the
Messenger of Allah was the ideal and paradigmatic human, so he must have
been an ideal and paradigmatic military commander.
Wanting
Muhammad’s behavior to conform to very modern ethical concepts and
widespread (but not necessarily accurate) beliefs about the nature and
conduct of war, the writers have created a narrative which, in
significant ways, departs from the account clearly and consistently
revealed in the earliest extant Arabic sources.
Professor Joel
Hayward sees this as an unhelpful explanatory tendency and believes that
the modern depiction of the Prophet’s relationship with warfare — which
presents him as being rather antipathetic to war, indeed as virtually a
pacifist who only fought reluctantly in self-defense — cannot actually
be sustained by a thorough and even-handed analysis of the early Islamic
sources.
A committed Muslim himself, Hayward concludes that,
within a competitive and conflictual environment with ubiquitous
threats, warfare was necessary to make real the bold new world that
Muhammad foresaw. Through original, meticulously researched and rigorous
analysis, Hayward covers all the raids and campaigns and demonstrates
that Muḥammad correctly understood the necessity and utility of force
and duly developed into an intuitive, effective and victorious military
practitioner who developed and enforced a strict moral code so as to
attain his goals whilst safeguarding the innocent.
This engaging,
accessible yet deeply scholarly and definitive book makes a major
contribution to strategic and military analysis and to the Prophet’s
biography.
Book Attributes | |
Pages | 482 |