Sufis in the Life of Medieval India by Simon Digby

Series Name: The Life and Works of Simon Digby (Volume III)

Sufis in the Life of Medieval India

AUTHOR- Simon Digby

SERIES EDITOR- David Lunn

With an Introduction by- Nile Green

HB

₹1995

POD

PB

₹  . $  . ₤

e-Book

₹  . $ . ₤

 

   

INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Simon Digby
  • SERIES EDITOR : David Lunn
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-6883-198-3
  • Year : 2025
  • Extent : 454
  • Discount available on checkout
  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

Sufis in the Life of Medieval India brings together ten of Simon Digby’s incisive and revelatory essays on one of his greatest intellectual passions. Originally published between 1975 and 1994 in a diverse array of books and journals, their collection here offers a unique perspective on the roles and attitudes of Sufis in the medieval period, and also fulfils one of Digby’s own unrealized ambitions of making these pieces available to new audiences.

Drawing on a wide range of primary sources—some well-known to scholars, others treated for the first time by Digby—the chapters here range from medieval statecraft and the attitudes of famous Chishtī shaykhs towards rulers and noblemen in the capital Delhi, to the activities of more obscure Sufis in less glamorous, provincial settings. From strictly orthodox pīrs to rule-breaking qalandars, from the perils of travel to the treatment of ethics, and from legends of wonder-working to debates over spiritual succession, this volume offers invaluable insights into the world of Sufism in particular and the social, political, and spiritual life of medieval India more broadly.

The Author
Simon Digby (1932–2010) was one of the foremost scholars on pre-Mughal India as well as a prolific writer, translator and collector. He was Honorary Librarian of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, curator in the Department of Eastern Art of the Ashmolean Museum, and a member of the Oriental Institute of the University of Oxford. His contribution to the study of Indian history can be seen through his wide-ranging research into fields as disparate as art and architecture, travellers’ tales and religious tracts, numismatics and furniture, Kipling and Qalandars, toys and fairy tales. .

The Editor
David Lunn was the Simon Digby Postdoctoral Fellow at SOAS University of London, where he also taught extensively between 2007 and 2023. He has published on Hindi–Urdu and Hindu–Muslim relations in pre-Independence India, early Hindustani cinema, and the poetry of Emperor Shāh ‘Ālam II, among other topics. He is currently an independent scholar..