- Patricia Crone
Patricia Crone, Ph.D., (born 1945, [cite web
url= http://authorities.loc.gov/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?Search_Arg=Crone%2C+Patricia&Search_Code=NHED_&PID=5762&SEQ=20080124065409
title= Library of Congress Authorities
accessdate= 2007-01-24
publisher=Library of Congress ]Denmark ) is ascholar ,author and historian of earlyIslam ic history working at the Institute for Advanced Study. A prolific writer, she established herself as a major challenger to the established narrative of the early history of Islam.cite web
url= http://www.ias.edu/about/faculty-and-emeriti/crone
title= Institute for Advanced Study: Faculty and Emeriti: Crone
accessdate= 2007-01-24
publisher=Institute for Advanced Study
archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20070304142029/http://www.ias.edu/about/faculty-and-emeriti/crone
archivedate= 2007-05-04
quote= Crone’s work has challenged long-held explanations and provided new approaches for the social, economic, legal and religious patterns that transformed Late Antiquity.]Career
Patricia Crone completed her undergraduate and graduate work at the
University of London ,Fact|date=January 2008 receiving a Ph.D. from theSchool of Oriental and African Studies in 1974. For the next three years, she served as a Senior Research Fellow at the University of London’sWarburg Institute . In 1977, she became a University Lecturer in Islamic history and a Fellow of Jesus College atOxford University . Dr. Crone became Assistant University Lecturer in Islamic studies and Fellow of Gonville andCaius College atCambridge University in 1990, and has held several positions at Cambridge since then. She served as University Lecturer in Islamic studies from 1992-94, and Reader in Islamic history from 1994 until her appointment to the PrincetonInstitute for Advanced Study where she becameAndrew W. Mellon professor in 1997. Since 2002, she has been a member of the Editorial Board of the journal "Social Evolution & History ".Patricia Crone and her associate Michael Cook, working at SOAS at the time, provided an analysis of early Islamic history by looking at the only surviving contemporary accounts of the rise of Islam, written in Armenian, Greek, Aramaic and Syriac by witnesses. They claimed that Islam, as represented by admittedly biased sources, was in essence a tribal rebellion against the Byzantine and Persian empires with deep roots in
Judaism , and thatArabs andJews were allies in these conquering communities.Bibliography
Sole author
* "Slaves on Horses : The Evolution of the Islamic Polity" (1980) ISBN 0-521-52940-9
* "Pre-Industrial Societies : Anatomy of the Pre-Modern World" (2003) ISBN 1-85168-311-9
* ". Six centuries of medieval islamic political thought" (2004).Columbia University Press . ISBN 0-231-13290-5. Also ISBN 0-231-13291-3.
* "Meccan Trade And The Rise Of Islam " (1987) ISBN 1-59333-102-9
* "Roman, Provincial and Islamic Law : The Origins of the Islamic Patronate" (1987 Paperback:2002) ISBN 0-521-52949-2
* "Medieval Islamic Political Thought" (2005).Edinburgh University Press , New Ed edition. ISBN 0-7486-2194-6Coauthor
* "", (1977) ISBN 0-521-29754-0
* "The Formation of Islam : Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800" (2002) ISBN 0-521-58813-8
* "Islamic Historiography" (2002) ISBN 0-521-62936-5
* "" (2003) ISBN 0-521-54111-5Articles
* [http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-europe_islam/mohammed_3866.jsp August 2006 article by Patricia Crone summarizing her views: What do we actually know about Mohammed? ]
References
External links
* [http://www.ias.edu/about/faculty-and-emeriti/crone Institute for Advanced Study: Faculty and Emeriti: Crone] — homepage in Princeton.
* [http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023113/0231132905.HTM Book God's Rule book review]
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/med/crone.html Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam] section beginning at page 231
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