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Muqaddimah

The Muqaddimah, meaning “The Introduction,” is the prolegomenon to Ibn Khaldun’s universal history work Kitab al-Ibar. Written in the Hafsid period in Ifriqiya (present-day Tunisia) in the late 14th century, it is considered a foundational work in philosophy of history, sociology, and historiography.

The work lays out a method for studying history that emphasizes causation, evidence, and the reliability of

In scholarship, the Muqaddimah is regarded as an early and influential contribution to sociology and historiography.

The work survives primarily as an introduction to Kitab al-Ibar and has circulated in manuscript and printed

Although the Muqaddimah is a standalone prologue, it is often presented as a cohesive treatise organized around

sources.
Ibn
Khaldun
introduces
key
concepts
such
as
asabiyya,
or
social
cohesion,
which
he
argues
helps
sustain
dynasties
during
their
rise
and
decline.
He
analyzes
the
differences
between
nomadic
and
sedentary
life,
the
economic
basis
of
states
(labor,
taxation,
trade),
urbanization,
and
the
environmental
and
geographic
factors
shaping
civilizations.
Religion,
education,
and
science
are
treated
as
integral
to
social
development
and
as
important
subjects
for
historical
inquiry.
It
advances
a
theory-driven,
empirical
approach
to
history,
critiques
uncritical
chronicle
writing,
and
emphasizes
patterns,
cycles,
and
the
conditions
that
produce
political
power
and
social
change.
forms.
A
major
modern
edition
and
English
translation
is
Franz
Rosenthal’s
The
Muqaddimah:
An
Introduction
to
History
(1967),
which
helped
popularize
the
text
in
the
Western
academy.
Other
translations
and
editions
have
followed.
its
thematic
chapters
on
knowledge,
history,
society,
statecraft,
and
civilization.