Economics and Social Relations
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Economics and Social Relations
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  • Economic - Symbiotic rship between sedentary peoples and nomads: weaponry, non-animal stuff, livestock, protection, plunder and nomadic role in trade which stops settlements becoming isolated.
  • Economic competition – pastorlaists try to use settlement run land, state punitive campaigns against nomads and seminomads. Raiding hardly friendly – mixture of both.
  • Social – some tribal members in settlement – sued as city cousins when ventured into towns, and by city dwellers use nomads as way out if trouble.
  • Seminomads usually end up settling in peasant or village populations retained important social ties.
  • Cultic ties – similar religious developments, and going to market. Economic an cultic ties created social bonds that increased not only intimacy but also stability of relations between nomads, seminomads and settled populations

Other Notes in this Category

  1. A tribal society
  2. Abu Bakr and Ridda wars
  3. Causes of Islamic Conquest
  4. Conclusions
  5. Economics and Social Relations
  6. Foundations of the islamic conquest
  7. Introductory Points
  8. muhammad’s consolidation
  9. Muhammad’s Teachings
  10. Political life in northern and central arabia
  11. Religious Aristocracies
  12. State and society in pre-islamic arabia
  13. The early islamic world – patricia crone
  14. The New Ruling Elite
  15. The State and the Nomads
  16. Tribe and state in arabia

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