2016
DOI: 10.1017/s0010417516000104
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Judging the Franks: Proof, Justice, and Diversity in Late Medieval Alexandria and Damascus

Abstract: This article describes how Islamic and Frankish legal devices complemented each other and were even combined to settle disagreements in the late medieval Middle East. For this purpose, it focuses on two legal institutions that provided responses to the biases of Islamic law against non-Muslims and to the prejudices of Franks against the local law. The first are the notaries sent to the Mamluk cities by the Venetian government to draw up legal documents and to support the transactions of Venetian merchants. The… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
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References 14 publications
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