But I'm grateful now I have got into it (and really must see it through to its conclusion.) The early chapters focusing largely on the politics of the Muslim kingdoms facing unwelcome, and generally unfathomable, invaders were ponderous, tending to deal with generalities with little in the way of individual human interest (basically, what I find valuable) but things perk up considerably later, especially in the material relating to the notion of the generation of jihad against the invaders. The development of a sense of jihad was a highly complex, non-linear business, and by no means sustained in the period under scrutiny. I'm now in a chapter dealing with How The Muslims Saw The Franks (the whole book draws on Muslim sources, many only recently translated into English; in fact, the majority not at all) and It's fascinating to witness the mechanics of Muslim prejudices being generated at first hand. Also very funny in places.
I suppose the single most striking thing that emerges from the Muslim sources is the speed with which some sort of messy détente was established between various Muslim factions and the peoples they saw as simply the Franks, despite the powerful sense of those Franks as the unwelcome Other. In the need to deal with the ordinary business of being alive there's always room for the most unlikely forms of accommodation.
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