Islamic Military Leadership and the Making of Empires maps thirteen centuries of strategy, statecraft, and society-from the first expansions to the Ottoman high tide. Edited by Hichem Karoui, the volume moves past hero-worship to ask a harder question: which leaders built orders that lasted-and why?
Each part pairs vivid narrative with analytical takeaways. You'll follow Khalid ibn al-Walid's tempo and deception; Saʿd ibn Abi Waqqa?'s innovations on the Iraq-Iran frontier; ʿAmr ibn al-ʿA?'s administrative design in Egypt; Umayyad coalition warfare from North Africa to Iberia; Qutaybah ibn Muslim's logistics and diplomacy in Transoxiana; the Seljuk steppe-to-state model; Almoravid/Almohad reform across the western Mediterranean; Ghaznavid and Ghurid thrusts into the Indo-Iranian corridor; Zangid unification; ?ala? al-Din's coalition-building and decisive campaigning; Baybars' fortress system, raids, and reconnaissance; and the Ottoman war-state-Janissaries, supply depots, siegecraft-culminating in Mehmed II and Suleiman.
Readers will find:
- A portable framework-victory, consolidation, institutions, legitimacy, adaptability-to evaluate commanders across eras.
- Frontier systems explained (garrisons, alliances, buffer zones) alongside the "soft" power of law, language, and ritual.
- A concluding synthesis that separates myth from memory and weighs the human, cultural, and economic costs of empire.
Balanced, tightly written, and rich with primary-source perspectives and modern historiography, this is an essential companion for students, general readers, and anyone curious about how leadership choices echo far beyond the battlefield.