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Date/Time
Date(s) - 6 Nov 2015
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Location
Bard Graduate Center

Category(ies) No Categories


Fustat and the World in the Year 1000

Fustat, founded as a military encampment by the armies of the Arab conquests in the seventh century, served as the center of a flourishing global network of trade that connected the Indian Ocean via the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. After the Fatimid caliphate moved from modern-day Tunisia to Egypt in 969 and founded Cairo (al-Qahira) as its new capital city two miles northeast of Fustat, both cities continued to thrive. As the commercial center of the powerful Fatimid empire, Fustat’s craftsmen competed in the production of luxury products including lusterware, elaborate textiles and carved ivory objects, which were then carried by traders and diplomats through the Mediterranean and beyond. This workshop explores the relationships between the Fatimids and their subjects and rivals in Egypt and in the broader Islamic and Mediterranean worlds. Papers will examine the ideological bases and political practices of the Fatimid state, as well as the widely dispersed objects, motifs and techniques associated with the Fatimid caliphate that became the courtly style par excellence of the medieval Mediterranean.

The workshop is free. It will take place at the Lecture Hall at 38 West 86th St., between Columbus Avenue & Central Park West, in New York City.

RSVP is required.
To reserve your place, please visit our web site, email [email protected], or call212.501.3019.

Please note that our Lecture Hall can only accommodate a limited number of people, so please come early to assure yourself a seat.

Workshop Sponsored by the Trehan Research Fund for Islamic Art and Material Culture

For more information – like the conference’s full schedule – please visit http://www.bgc.bard.edu/news/events/fustat-symposium.html.