Back to Topic 8.4 — Law, governance and administration
8.4.1History SL12 flashcards

Law, governing institutions and administration

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8.4.1
Question

What is sharia?

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Card 1definition

Question

What is sharia?

Answer

Islamic religious law, based on the Quran and the teachings of the Prophet, applied by qadis in Islamic states like the Abbasid Caliphate.

Card 2definition

Question

What is a qadi?

Answer

A trained Islamic judge appointed to apply sharia in court, handling marriage, inheritance, contracts and everyday disputes.

Card 3definition

Question

What was the mazalim court?

Answer

A separate court, often headed by the caliph or a governor, hearing complaints against officials outside strict sharia procedure — a fast, secular channel of justice.

Card 4definition

Question

What was a wali in the Abbasid Caliphate?

Answer

A provincial governor appointed by the caliph, backed by tax and military officials answering to Baghdad.

Card 5definition

Question

What was a Farba (or Farin) in the Mali Empire?

Answer

The provincial governor the mansa placed in charge of a conquered or annexed region, usually a trusted general or courtier.

Card 6definition

Question

Who were griots and why did they matter for law in Mali?

Answer

Mali's praise-singers and oral historians, who preserved customary law, genealogy and history by memory rather than writing.

Card 7process

Question

How did the Abbasid Caliphate govern its provinces?

Answer

Through a centralised bureaucracy: the caliph, a vizier running government day to day, and diwans (departments for tax, army, post) staffed by trained officials, plus a wali in each province.

Card 8process

Question

How did the Mali Empire govern its provinces?

Answer

Loosely and locally: governors (Farba) ran core provinces directly, while tributary chiefs kept their own thrones and customs as long as they paid tribute and stayed loyal.

Card 9concept

Question

Why did the Abbasids need both the qadi's court and the mazalim court?

Answer

The qadi's sharia court handled everyday religious and civil disputes, but had no power over powerful officials; the mazalim let subjects appeal quickly against official abuse outside normal sharia procedure.

Card 10concept

Question

How did religious and customary law coexist in Mali?

Answer

Islamic law applied mainly in Muslim trading towns like Timbuktu (trade, religious duties, disputes between merchants), while customary law — preserved by elders and griots — handled land, marriage and inheritance for most ordinary subjects elsewhere.

Card 11comparison

Question

Compare who administered law in the Abbasid Caliphate versus the Mali Empire.

Answer

Abbasids: trained scholar-officials (qadi) and appointed governors (wali), authority from religious training and formal appointment. Mali: Farba governors, nobility and griots, authority from personal loyalty, clan status and oral tradition.

Card 12concept

Question

Why did Mali's decentralised system of government make sense for its economy?

Answer

Mali's wealth came from taxing the trans-Saharan gold-salt trade over a huge area, so ruling loosely through governors and tributary chiefs — rather than a dense bureaucracy — kept trade and tribute flowing efficiently.

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IB History Law, governing institutions and administration Flashcards | 8.4.1 | Aimnova | Aimnova