Saif al-Arab
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As per a discussion on the Arabic Coffee Shop thread, I decided to create this thread.
Due to certain perceptions nowadays, rightly or wrongly, I have often come across, especially from non-Muslims, the view that Arabs (in particular but this could be said about other majority Muslim ethnic groups in the world) apparently abhor their own women.
Such views have almost always been tied to certain state practices (laws in place in other words, often fairly recent ones) that somehow magically removed the general affection and respect that women are given in Arab culture and most other cultures.
To me that has always been a bit baffling and quite frankly ignorant.
As we all know, democracy, supposedly, originated in modern-day Greece. However it was nowhere near even remotely comparable to the kind of democracy that we see in today's Western world.
However when I took a closer look at history, as the history buff that I am (no hiding here), it came to my realization that those same, supposedly, anti-women Arabs, in fact had some of the oldest recorded and well-known female rulers in the world. Not only ethnic Arabs but our pre-Arab ancestors who were native to our lands (Arab world) and who were mostly Semitic but not only.
However for the sake of not complicating things too much I will stick to the ethnic Arab ones (those that we know spoke Arabic, were Arab in ancestry or partially Arab) and who ruled areas where some of the first Arabs emerged in history 3000 + years ago as an ethnic group (obviously our ancestors prior to that existed - in fact they are the oldest known defined cultures, but not with an Arab identity, nevertheless still native to our lands) and where they have left clear traces in their way in the form of numerous World UNESCO Heritage sites.
Some have been described in religious scriptures (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) while others have (simultaneously as well) been described in Roman, Greek, Assyrian etc. sources as well as Greek historians, the first real historians in the world as we know them today, in the form of Herodotus who has written a lot of works about Arabia as this part of the world was known to the ancient Greeks.
Arab female rulers such as Queen Sheba and Queen Zenobia for instance who emerged in Arabia. Queen Sheba (almost 3000 years ago), Queen Shamsi (ruled almost 3000 years ago) Queen Zabibe (almost 3000 years ago as well), Queen Mavia (1600 years ago), Queen Yatie (almost 3000 years ago too) and Queen Zenobia (1750 years ago).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_of_Sheba
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabibe
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mavia_(queen)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yatie
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenobia

Even an Arab women became de facto the only Caliph in history during the Fatimid era. Sitt al-Mulk (1021-1036).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitt_al-Mulk
Consider this thread as a pure curiosity as I don't want to write an essay nor is this some scholarly work and I have not covered all of the female rulers or even remotely anything in depth but I think that it deserves a thread on its own, especially the women Caliph, as there has been public talk, even among scholars in KSA, that women scholars are allowed to issue fatwas which became a reality late last year.
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1169376/saudi-arabia
Moreover this also serves as artillery for the Arab brothers here who probably have been met with such an stereotype at one point in their lives. I am talking about online here.
@Gomig-21 @Hamilcar @fachfouch @HannibalBarca @SALMAN F @Malik Alashter @The SC @Falcon29 @azzo @Full Moon etc.
Due to certain perceptions nowadays, rightly or wrongly, I have often come across, especially from non-Muslims, the view that Arabs (in particular but this could be said about other majority Muslim ethnic groups in the world) apparently abhor their own women.
Such views have almost always been tied to certain state practices (laws in place in other words, often fairly recent ones) that somehow magically removed the general affection and respect that women are given in Arab culture and most other cultures.
To me that has always been a bit baffling and quite frankly ignorant.
As we all know, democracy, supposedly, originated in modern-day Greece. However it was nowhere near even remotely comparable to the kind of democracy that we see in today's Western world.
However when I took a closer look at history, as the history buff that I am (no hiding here), it came to my realization that those same, supposedly, anti-women Arabs, in fact had some of the oldest recorded and well-known female rulers in the world. Not only ethnic Arabs but our pre-Arab ancestors who were native to our lands (Arab world) and who were mostly Semitic but not only.
However for the sake of not complicating things too much I will stick to the ethnic Arab ones (those that we know spoke Arabic, were Arab in ancestry or partially Arab) and who ruled areas where some of the first Arabs emerged in history 3000 + years ago as an ethnic group (obviously our ancestors prior to that existed - in fact they are the oldest known defined cultures, but not with an Arab identity, nevertheless still native to our lands) and where they have left clear traces in their way in the form of numerous World UNESCO Heritage sites.
Some have been described in religious scriptures (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) while others have (simultaneously as well) been described in Roman, Greek, Assyrian etc. sources as well as Greek historians, the first real historians in the world as we know them today, in the form of Herodotus who has written a lot of works about Arabia as this part of the world was known to the ancient Greeks.
Arab female rulers such as Queen Sheba and Queen Zenobia for instance who emerged in Arabia. Queen Sheba (almost 3000 years ago), Queen Shamsi (ruled almost 3000 years ago) Queen Zabibe (almost 3000 years ago as well), Queen Mavia (1600 years ago), Queen Yatie (almost 3000 years ago too) and Queen Zenobia (1750 years ago).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_of_Sheba
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabibe
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mavia_(queen)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yatie
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenobia
Even an Arab women became de facto the only Caliph in history during the Fatimid era. Sitt al-Mulk (1021-1036).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitt_al-Mulk
Consider this thread as a pure curiosity as I don't want to write an essay nor is this some scholarly work and I have not covered all of the female rulers or even remotely anything in depth but I think that it deserves a thread on its own, especially the women Caliph, as there has been public talk, even among scholars in KSA, that women scholars are allowed to issue fatwas which became a reality late last year.
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1169376/saudi-arabia
Moreover this also serves as artillery for the Arab brothers here who probably have been met with such an stereotype at one point in their lives. I am talking about online here.
@Gomig-21 @Hamilcar @fachfouch @HannibalBarca @SALMAN F @Malik Alashter @The SC @Falcon29 @azzo @Full Moon etc.