The Legal Conceptualization of Prospected Freedom: The kitāba Between Manumission, Self-Purchase, and Employment

Emunds, Laura (3 November 2022). The Legal Conceptualization of Prospected Freedom: The kitāba Between Manumission, Self-Purchase, and Employment (Unpublished). In: Coercion, Slavery, and Relations of Dependency in the Islamicate World. Bonn. 2.-4.11.2022.

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The term kitāba refers to an unspecified writ or document. In a legal sense, it denotes a contract concluded between a slave and his or her owner, stipulating that the former will obtain freedom once the contractual obligations are fulfilled. It is rooted in the Qur’anic revelation (Q 24:33) and, moreover, shows similarities to forms of self-purchase known in Antiquity. When it comes to Islamic slavery, the kitāba was a common legal tool from the earliest days of Islam until the period of abolition. In the Islamic legal discourse, the contract is treated regularly and throughout history by Muslim jurists not only in works of jurisprudence, but also in more practice-orientated literature such as manuals for notaries.

Most commonly, the kitāba is understood as a contract stipulating that the owner receives a certain amount of money paid by the slave in instalments over an agreed upon period with the prospect of manumission once this process is concluded successfully. However, a close examination of legal sources shows that this perception needs to be adjusted. In fact, the kitāba could also be concluded for other services. Therefore, the proposed paper aims at tracing the Ḥanafī legal discourse concerning the changing definitions and conceptualisations of the kitāba. Jurists such as al-Shaybānī (d. 189/805) and al-Sarakhsī (d. 483/ 1090) discuss the contract at least partly under the headline of manumission (ʿitq). Over the course of time, this perception seems to have undergone significant changes indicated already in al-Marghīnānī’s (d. 593/1197) Hidāya. In the 19th century, then, the contract is discussed in Egypt by ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rāfiʿī (d. 1905) as related more closely to the concept of ijāra which does not only include the rent of objects but also a person’s labour.

Item Type:

Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Division/Institute:

06 Faculty of Humanities > Department of Art and Cultural Studies > Institut für Studien zum Nahen Osten und zu muslimischen Gesellschaften

Graduate School:

Graduate School of the Humanities (GSH)

UniBE Contributor:

Emunds, Laura

Subjects:

200 Religion > 290 Other religions
900 History > 950 History of Asia
900 History > 960 History of Africa

Language:

English

Submitter:

Laura Emunds

Date Deposited:

27 Jan 2023 14:40

Last Modified:

27 Jan 2023 23:27

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/176738

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