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Baladiyya
(9,924 words)
, municipality, the term used in Turkish (
belediye ), Arabic, and other Islamic languages, to denote modern municipal institutions of European type, as against earlier Islamic forms of urban organisation [see madīna ]. The term, like so many modern Islamic neologisms and the innovations they express, first appeared in Turkey, where Western-style municipal institutions and services were introduced as part of the general reform programme of the
Tanẓīmāt [
q.v.]. (1) turkey. The first approaches towards modern municipal administration seems to have been made by Sultan …
Dustūr
(44,385 words)
, in modern Arabic constitution. A word of Persian origin, it seems originally to have meant a person exercising authority, whether religious or political, and was later specialized to designate members of the Zoroastrian priesthood. It occurs in
Kalīla wa-Dimna in the sense of “counsellor”, and recurs with the same sense, at a much later date, in the phrase
Dustūr-i mükerrem , one of the honorific titles of the Grand Vizier in the Ottoman Empire. More commonly,
dustūr was used in the sense of “rule” or “regulation”, and in particular the code of ru…
Ḥukūma
(18,623 words)
, in modern Arabic “government”. Like many political neologisms in Islamic languages, the word seems to have been first used in its modern sense in 19th century Turkey, and to have passed from Turkish into Arabic and other languages.
Ḥukūma comes from the Arabic root
ḥ.k.m , with the meaning “to judge, adjudicate” (cf. the related meaning, dominant in Hebrew and other Semitic languages, of wisdom. See ḥikma ). In classical usage the verbal noun
ḥukūma means the act or office of adjudication, of dispensing justice, whether by a sovereign, a judge, …
Baladiyya
(10,069 words)
, municipalité, terme utilisé en turc (
belediye), et d’autres langues islamiques, pour désigner les institutions municipales modernes de type européen, par opposition aux anciennes formes musulmanes d’organisation urbaine (voir Madīna). Le terme, comme beaucoup de néologismes de l’Islam moderne et comme les innovations qu’ils expriment, apparut d’abord en Turquie; les institutions et les services de type occidental furent introduits dans ce pays dans le cadre du programme général de réforme des
Tanẓīmāt [
q.v.]. I. — Turquie. Les premiers pas vers une administration muni…
Source:
Encyclopédie de l’Islam