
Michael Brett (2) (1934–)
Author of The Berbers
For other authors named Michael Brett, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Michael Brett is Emeritus Reader in the History of North Africa at SOAS, University of London. His publications include The Moors: Islam in the West (1984 with Werner Forman), The Berbers (1996, with E. Fentress), Ibn Khaldun and the Medieval Maghrib (1999), The Rise of the Fatimids (2001) and show more Approaching African History (2013). show less
Series
Works by Michael Brett
Tunisia - Insight Guides 1 copy
Associated Works
The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 4, c.1024-c.1198, Part 1 (2004) — Contributor — 75 copies, 1 review
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Common Knowledge
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Reviews
A history of the Berber-speaking peoples of North Africa and the Sahara. Well, the early parts are more archaeology than history, and the latter lean towards ethnography.
Quite good, though the bits about the ”current situation” are obviously dated, and I don’t know what if any archaeological progress there has been in the last thirty years.
Quite good, though the bits about the ”current situation” are obviously dated, and I don’t know what if any archaeological progress there has been in the last thirty years.
The Fatimids were a Shi'ite dynasty who claimed descent from Muhammad's daughter Fatima - thence the name - and got started as a messianic movement in the early tenth century in what's now Tunisia. Their attempt to reunify the Islamic world under their form of Shi'ism failed, but they ended up ruling an empire centred on Egypt until the last caliph was disposed by Saladin during the middle of the twelfth century, and offshoots of their creed lives on to the present day, including the Druze show more and the Nizaris.
The books is rather heavy going, with a relentless march of names, byzantine politics, and the intricacies of Ismai'ili theology making for a dense text asking for a lot from the reader. While I come away with a much improved understanding of the general career of the dynasty, much of the detail will be forgotten soon enough, if not already. show less
The books is rather heavy going, with a relentless march of names, byzantine politics, and the intricacies of Ismai'ili theology making for a dense text asking for a lot from the reader. While I come away with a much improved understanding of the general career of the dynasty, much of the detail will be forgotten soon enough, if not already. show less
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