History of concubinage in the Muslim world

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{{other uses|Islam and slavery (disambiguation)}}

File:Harem Scene with Mothers and Daughters in Varying Costumes, One of 274 Vintage Photographs, late 19th-early 20th century.jpg, late 19th or early 20th century{{Cite web |title=Harem Scene with Mothers and Daughters in Varying Costumes (1997.3.26) |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/objects/161357 |website=Brooklyn Museum}}]]

File:The Aurut Bazaar, or Slave Market - Walsh Robert & Allom Thomas - 1836 (cropped).jpg

{{slavery}}

Concubinage in the Muslim world was the practice of Muslim men entering into intimate relationships without marriage,{{cite encyclopedia|title=Encyclopedia of Social History|entry=Concubinage|page=317|editor=Peter N. Stearns|quote="The system in Muslim societies was an arrangement in which a slave woman lived with a man as his wife without being married to him in a civil or normal way."}} with enslaved women,{{harvnb|Hain|2017|p=326}}: "Concubines in Islamic society, with few exceptions, were slaves. Sex with your own property was not considered to be adultery (zina). Owners purchased the sexuality of the enslaved along with their bodies." though in rare, exceptional cases, sometimes with free women.{{harvnb|Hamid|2017|p=190}}: "Timurid sources from the later period list numerous women as royal concubines who were not slaves."{{cite encyclopedia|author=Dalton Brock|title=Daily Life of Women: An Encyclopedia from Ancient Times to the Present|entry=Concubines - Islamic Caliphate |editor=Colleen Boyett |editor2=H. Micheal Tarver |editor3=Mildred Diane Gleason|page=70|quote=However, that did not deter wealthy households from also seeking and acquiring freewomen as concubines, although such a practice was argued to be in violation of sharia law.|publisher=ABC-CLIO}}{{harvnb|Hamid|2017|p=193}}: "The disregard for Muslim legal codes regulating marriage and concubinage did not go uncommented on by contemporaries. In his memoirs, Babur disapproved of the practice of taking free Muslim women as concubines [in the Tamurid dynasty], deeming the relationships to be unlawful."

It was a common practice in the Ancient Near East for the owners of slaves to have intimate relations with individuals considered their property,{{efn|'The study of the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East from Iran to Turkey to Egypt, has been pursued in the last two centuries in societies of Europe and the Americas that have themselves been mired in industrial slavery. Scholars of the ancient region have consequently been quick to point out that nowhere do we see the kind of mass exploitation that we find since the sixteenth century of our era..' {{harv|Snell|2011|p=4}}}} and Mediterranean societies, and had persisted among the three major Abrahamic religions, with distinct legal differences, since antiquity.{{sfn|Nirenberg|2014|pp=42–43}}{{sfn|Yagur|2020|pp=101–102}}{{efn|'Nowhere in the New Testament epistles does Paul or any other letter writer state explicitly that the sexual use of slaves constitutes sexual immorality or sexual impurity..the practice of using slaves as a benign and safe sexual outlet persisted throughout antiquity.' {{harv|Glancy|2002|pp=49–51, 144}}}} Islamic law has traditionalist and modern interpretations,{{sfn|Mufti|2019|pp=1–6}} with the former historically allowing men to have sexual relations with their female slaves,{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=22}}{{sfn | Brandeis University}} while affording female slaves a variety of different rights and privileges in different periods. An example is the status of umm al-walad, which could be conveyed to a concubine who gave birth to a child whose paternity was acknowledged by her owner. In certain times and places, this status prevented a concubine from being sold, and provided other benefits.{{Citation |last=Schacht |first=J. |title=Umm al-Walad |date=2012-04-24 |url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/umm-al-walad-COM_1290 |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition |access-date=2023-09-17 |publisher=Brill |language=en}}

Concubinage was widely practiced throughout the Umayyad, Abbasid, Mamluk, Ottoman, Timurid and Mughal Empires. The prevalence within royal courts also resulted in many Muslim rulers over the centuries being the children of concubines, including the great majority of early Abbasid caliphs and several Shia imams. The practice of concubinage declined with the abolition of slavery.{{sfn|Cortese|2013}}

Today, slavery has been officially abolished across the Muslim world and the vast majority of modern Muslims and Islamic scholars consider slavery in general and slave-concubinage to be unacceptable practices.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=52|ps=: "the vast majority of Muslims do not consider slavery, especially slave concubinage, to be acceptable practices for the modern world"}}

Characteristics

File:Jules Laurens 14.jpg, {{Circa|1847}}|alt=Painting of seated women, with man standing]]

Classifications of concubinage often defines practices in Islamic societies as a distinct variant. In one reading, there are three cultural patterns of concubinage: European, Islamic and Asian.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|p=203}} Concubinage has also been categorised in terms of form and function, which in the Islamic world varied between times and places. The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology gives four distinct forms of concubinage,{{sfn|The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology|1999}} three of which are applicable to the Muslim Word: 'elite concubinage', where concubine ownership was primarily related to social status, such as under the Umayyads;

royal concubinage, where concubines became consorts to the ruler and perpetuated the royal bloodline and politics and reproduction were deeply intertwined, including under the Abbasids and in the Ottoman empire; and concubinage as a patriarchal function where concubines were of low status and the children of concubines became permanently inferior to the children of wives, such as in Mughal India.{{sfn|The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology|1999}}

The expansion of various Muslim dynasties resulted in the acquisitions of concubines, through purchase, gifts from other rulers, and captives of war. To have a large number of concubines became a symbol of status. While Muslim soldiers in the early Islamic conquests were given female captives as a reward for military participation, they were later frequently purchased and men were permitted to have as many concubines as they could afford. As slaves for pleasure were expensive, they were typically the preserve of privileged elites.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=203}}

The concubines of Islamic rulers could achieve considerable power,{{harvnb|Klein|2014|p=122}} and often enjoyed higher status than other slaves. Abu Hanifa and others argued for the extension of Islamic modesty practices to concubines, recommending that the concubine be established in the home and their chastity be protected from friends or kin.{{harvnb|Katz|1986}} Most Islamic schools of thought restricted concubinage to a relationship where the female slave was required to be monogamous to her master.{{sfn|Bloom|Blair|2002|p=48}} While scholars exhorted masters to treat their slaves equally, a master was allowed to show favoritism towards a concubine. Some scholars recommended holding a banquet (walima) to celebrate the concubinage relationship, though not required by the teachings of Islam.

In slave-owning societies, most concubines were slaves, but not all. Concubines were typically freed after giving birth in the Muslim world, as in about one-third of non-Islamic slave-holding societies.{{efn|Many societies in addition to those advocating Islam automatically freed the concubine, especially after she had had a child. About a third of all non-Islamic societies fall into this category.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}}} In Islamic culture, a slave who bore a child to a free man was known as an umm al-walad, could not be sold, and, in most circumstances, at her owner's death, was freed.{{sfn|Gordon|Hain|2017|p=328}} The children of concubines in Islamic societies were generally declared as legitimate. Among societies that did not legally require the manumission of concubines, it was often done anyway.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}

Almost all Abbasid caliphs were born to concubines and several Twelver Shia imams were also born to concubines.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} The Ottoman sultans also appeared to have preferred concubinage to marriage,{{sfn|Peirce|1993|p=30}} and for a time all royal children were born of concubines.{{sfn|Peirce|1993|p=39}} Over time, the concubines of the Imperial Harem came to exercise a considerable degree of influence over Ottoman politics.{{harvnb|Cortese|Calderini|2006}} The consorts of Ottoman sultans were often neither Turkish, nor Muslim by birth, and it has been argued that this was intentional so as to limit the political leverage a concubine might possess as compared to a princess or a daughter of the local elite.{{sfn|Peirce|1993|p=37–39}} Ottoman sultans also appeared to have only one son with each concubine, and after a concubine gave birth to a son, would no longer have intercourse with them. This also limited the power of each concubine and son.{{sfn|Peirce|1993|p=42-43}} Even so, many concubines developed social networks, and accumulated personal wealth, both of which allowed them to rise in terms of social status.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} The practice declined with the abolition of slavery, starting in the 19th century.

=Enslavement=

{{Main|Islamic views on slavery}}

File:The Sale of Circassian Captives to a Turkish Bashaw (Pacha) (1816).webp

The enslavement of other Muslims was expressly forbidden by Islamic jurists.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=53–54}} However, in times of war, non-Muslims who were captured in battle could be enslaved,{{sfn|Badawi|2019|p=17}} and the population of a conquered territory could also be enslaved, paving the way for concubinage.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=27–28}} During the early Muslim conquests, capture in war was a major source of concubines, but this source declined to a very small proportion later on. Enslavement was intended both as a form of humiliation to the defeated for previous or continuing disbelief,{{sfn|McMahon|2013|p=18}} and as a debt.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=27–28}} However, non-Muslims could not be enslaved if they were either residents of a Muslim state (dhimmis) or protected foreign visitors (mustamin).{{sfn|Antunes|Trivellato|Halevi|2014|p=57}}{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=203}} The sexual relationship between a concubine and her master was viewed as a debt upon the woman until she gave birth to her master's child and the master's later death.{{sfn|Willis|2014}} Some men purchased female slaves, whereas Muslim soldiers in the early Islamic conquests were given female captives as a reward for military participation. Men were permitted to have as many concubines as they could afford, but as slaves for pleasure were expensive, they were typically an elite privilege.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=203}}

At the same time, the Qur'an and the hadith traditions hailed the manumission of slaves as a virtue that would be rewarded in the afterlife.{{efn|'Encouragement to manumit slaves, enshrined in the Qur'an and law, likely contributed to social mobility., Manumitting slaves earned their owner eternal rewards. The Qur'an advocated manumission of slaves as an act of a righteous person or as a religious boon...Key hadith also support manumission: "He who has a slave-girl and teaches her good manners and improves her education then manumits and marries her, will get a double reward." Concubines, however, sometimes had a surer route to manumission than their owners' desire for spiritual coinage; under certain conditions their wombs could provide escape from slavery. A slave who bore a child to a free man, known as an umm al-walad, could not be sold, in most circumstances, and at her owner's death, she was to be freed {{harv|Hain|2017|p=328}}.}} Some jurists argued that prisoners were either to be enslaved or killed. Others maintained that a Muslim military commander could choose between unconditionally releasing, ransoming or enslaving these war captives.{{efn|'Other issues differentiating the classical doctrine and modernist approaches include the treatment of prisoners of war, with some of the early jurists allowing Muslim commanders a choice only between killing or enslaving them, and others – on the principle of serving the public interest (maṣlaḥa) –giving commanders more discretion to ransom prisoners (for example, in exchange for Muslim prisoners or for money) or even to release them unconditionally. Seizing on this principle of public interest, and pointing to the obsolescence of practices such as slavery, virtually all modernists by contrast narrow the options to those sanctioned by contemporary international norms: releasing prisoners upon the cessation of hostilities either unconditionally or as part of reciprocal exchanges.' {{harv|Mufti|2019|p=5}}}} Later on in Muslim history, the purchase of slaves from outside the Muslim world became the most important source of concubines.{{cite book|title=Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry|author=Bernard Lewis|year=1992|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=9–10}} Hereditary slavery, though technically possible,{{sfn|Erdem|1996|p=52}} was rarely practiced in the Muslim world.{{cite book|title=Unveiling the Harem: Elite Women and the Paradox of Seclusion in Eighteenth-Century Cairo|author=Mary Ann Fay|quote=Without war captives or a system of slave breeding, which did not exist in the Middle East, slaves would have to be imported from outside as they were from Caucasus and Africa.|page=78|publisher=Syracuse University Press}}{{cite book|editor1-first=Hettie V. |editor1-last=Williams |editor2-first=Julius O. |editor2-last=Adekunle|title=Color Struck: Essays on Race and Ethnicity in Global Perspective|publisher=University Press of America|quote=Not only was slavery not racialized under Islamic rule nor was it hereditary...|page=63}}{{cite book|title=God's Shadow: Sultan Selim, His Ottoman Empire, and the Making of the Modern World|author=Alan Mikhail|year=2020|quote=In Islam, slavery was temporary, not hereditary|page=137}} Slave-girls by descent are those that are born to slave mothers.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=22}} Although a slave girl who bore children to their master bore free children, owners who would marry off their female slaves to someone else, would be the masters of any children born from that marriage too.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=57}}

;Exceptions

Despite the Islamic prohibition, there were historical instances where Muslims enslaved Muslims from other ethnic groups.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=53–54}} In the 12th century, amid internecine war in Al-Andalus, the Umayyad caliph Muhammad II of Córdoba ordered that Berber women in Cordoba be captured and sold. The Berber Almohads in turn captured and sold Umayyad women.{{sfn|Gleave|2015|p=166–168}} There are also reports of Ottoman generals enslaving Mamluk wives and girls in the Ottoman–Mamluk War (1516–1517), and in 1786–87, in the region of modern-day Chad, Muslim women and children from the Sultanate of Bagirmi were likewise enslaved by the ruler of Wadai around 1800.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=43–44}}

=Social rights=

Islamic law obliged slave owners to provide their female slaves with food, clothing, and shelter, and gave female slaves protection from sexual exploitation by anyone who was not their owner.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|pp=222–223}} If she bore her master a child and if he accepted paternity she could obtain the position of an Umm walad. Separately, if someone bought a woman with child, they could not be separated until, according to Ibn Abi Zayd, the child was six years old.{{sfn|Bellagamba|Greene|Klein|2016|p=24}} However, while slave concubines could rise to positions of influence, these position did not legally protect them from forced labour, forced marriage and sex, and even elite slaves were still traded as chattel.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|pp=222–223}}

As sexual commodities, female slaves were, in some historical periods, not allowed to cover themselves in the fashion of free women.{{sfn|Kamrava|2011|p=193}} The Caliph Umar prohibited slave girls from resembling free women and forbade them from covering their face.{{sfn|Abou El Fadl|2014|p=198}} Slave women were also not required to cover their arms, hair or legs below the knees.{{sfn|Abou El Fadl|2006|p=198}} Myrne writes Islamic jurists required female slaves to cover their whole body (except face and hands).{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=218}} There is disagreement over what Hanafi jurists allowed: according to Ibn Abidin most Hanafi scholars did not allow the exposure of a female slave's body (including chest or back),{{cite book|author=Khaled Abou El Fadl|date=1 October 2014|title=Speaking in God's Name: Islamic Law, Authority and Women|page=525}} but Myrne writes they allowed this in the case of potential male buyers.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=218}} Amira Bennison writes that, during the Abbasid period, male buyers could not in practice examine female slaves (except her face and hands), but could request her examination by other women.{{cite book|author=Amira Bennison|title=The Great Caliphs: The Golden Age of the 'Abbasid Empire|publisher=Yale University Press|pages=146–147}}

In accordance with their lesser status, if a slave fornicated they received less punishment than a free woman. Female slaves could also be traded freely among many men, with few, if any, apparent restrictions.{{sfn|Afary|2009|p=81–82}} While bearing a master's child could lead to freedom for a slave-girl, the motive that this gave female slaves to have sex with their owners was a cause of regular opposition to concubinage from free wives, and early moral stories depicted wives as the victims of concubinage.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=81}} While a free Muslim woman was considered to be a man's honour, a slave-girl was merely property and not a man's honour.{{sfn|Bouachrine|2014|p=8}}

Medieval Muslim literature and legal documents show that those female slaves whose main use was for sexual purposes were distinguished in markets from those whose primary use was for domestic duties. The term suriyya was used for female slaves with whom masters enjoyed sexual relations. The Arabic term surriyya has been widely translated in Western scholarship as "concubine"{{sfn|Layish|p=331}}{{sfn|Brown|2019|p=70}}{{sfn|Robinson|p=90}}{{sfn|Reda|Amin|p=228}} or "slave concubine".{{sfn|Brown|2019|p=70}} In other texts they are referred to as "slaves for pleasure" or "slave-girls for sexual intercourse".{{sfn|Myrne|2019|pp=196–197}} It was not a secure status as the concubine could be traded as long as the master had not impregnated her.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=50–51}} Many female slaves became concubines to their owners and bore their children. Others were just used for sex before being transferred. The allowance for men to use contraception with female slaves assisted in thwarting unwanted pregnancies.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|pp=196–197}} Withdrawal before ejaculation (azl) did not require the consent of the slave.{{sfn|Ali|2017}} Islamic law and Sunni ulama historically recognised two categories of concubines.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=22}}

==Umm walad==

{{Main|Umm walad}}

Umm walad ({{langx|ar|أم ولد||lit=mother of the child}}) was the title given to a slave-concubine in the Muslim world after she had born her master a child. She could not be sold, and became automatically free on her master's death.{{sfn|Bowen|1928|p=13}}{{cite web|url=http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e2424|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924063148/http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e2424|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 24, 2015|title=Umm al-Walad|work=Oxford Islamic Studies}} The offspring of an umm walad were free and considered legitimate children of their father, including full rights of name and inheritance. The Sunni law schools disagreements existed among some of the four major schools of Sunni law regarding the concubine's entitlement to this status. Hanafi jurists state that the umm walad status is contingent on the master acknowledging paternity of the child. If he does not accept that he is the father of the child then both the mother and child remain slaves. Maliki jurists ruled that the concubine becomes entitled to the status of umm walad even if her master did not acknowledge that the child is his.{{sfn|Brockopp|2000|pp=195–196}} This is decidedly different from the case of enslaved women who bore children to their masters in Mediterranean Christian cultures: there the child retained the same slave status as his mother.{{efn|'Female slaves around the Mediterranean were subject to sexual and reproductive demands as well as demands on their physical labour. Focusing on the sexual and reproductive aspects of the shared culture of Mediterranean slavery reveals three things. First, though historians have paid more attention to the sexual exploitation of slave women in Islamic contexts, sexual exploitation was also common and well documented in Christian contexts. Second, the most important difference between Islamic and Christian practices of slavery had to do with the status of children. Under Christian and Roman law, children inherited the status of their mothers, so the child of a free man and a slave woman would be a slave. In contrast, under Islamic law, if a free man acknowledged paternity of a child by his slave woman, that child was born free and legitimate.' {{harv|Barker|2019|p=61}}}} The offspring of slave relationships could rise to great eminence, with no prejudice attached to their origins: most of the caliphs of the Abbasid Caliphate were born from relationships with enslaved concubines as were half of the imams of Imami Shi'ism.{{efn|'With the transition from the Umayyads to the Abbasids, the upward swell of subaltern demographics thrust individual concubines unambiguously into the realm of elite politics. Whereas only the last three Umayyad caliphs were born to concubines, the great majority of the early Abbasid caliphs were sons of this heretofore nameless class of women.' {{harv|Hain|2017|p=328,4,246}}}}

Practice in the Middle East and Europe

File:V.M. Doroshevich-East and War-Harem enhaced.jpg, by Doroshevich, c. 1905]]

While Muslim cultures acknowledged concubinage, as well as polygamy, as a man's legal right, in reality, these were usually practiced only by the royalty and elite sections of society.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|p=203}} The large-scale availability of women for sexual slavery had a strong influence on Muslim thought, even though the "harem" culture of the elite was not mirrored by most of the Muslim population.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=41}}

=Early Islam=

Concubinage was rare in Arabia in the period immediate preceding the advent of Islam. One analysis of the information found there were only a few cases of children being born from concubines in the time of Muhammad's father and grandfather.{{sfn|Majied|2017|p=16–17}} With the early Muslim conquests, concubinage expanded rapidly as a practice due to the wealth and power they brought to the Quraysh tribes.{{efn|The conquests, however, had consequences that ultimately upset the pre-Islamic system. As the Umayyad dynasty matured, certain families within the Quraysh became significantly wealthier and more powerful than tribes that had once been equal to them...In this new order, the Muslim elites turned to the cheapest, safest, and most loyal women available to them: cousins and concubines.{{harvnb|Majied|2017|pp=20–21}}}} Due to these conquests, a large number of female slaves became available and births from concubines arose. A study of the Arab genealogical text Nasab Quraysh records the maternity of 3,000 Quraishi tribesmen, most of whom lived in between 500 and 750 CE. The data shows that there was a massive increase in the number of children born to concubines with the emergence of Islam.{{harvnb|Majied|2017|pp=11–12}}

==Women of Hawazin==

The Banu Thaqif and Banu Hawazin tribes decided to go to war against Muhammad under the leadership of Malik ibn Awf.{{harvnb|Mubarakpuri|1998|pp=259–264}} Malik had the unfortunate idea of bringing the women, children and livestock with his army.{{sfn|Saron|1986|p=266}} He believed that by bringing their women and children with the army, all his soldiers would fight more courageously to defend them.

The Muslim army defeated the Hawazin and captured their women and children and the pagan soldiers fled. The war booty which the Muslims obtained was 24,000 camels, more than 40,000 goats, 160,000 dirhams worth of silver and 6,000 women and children. Muhammad waited for the Hawazin to come to him to reclaim their families and properties. However, none of them came. Finally, Muhammad distributed the war booty among the Muslim soldiers. Anecdotes include those of one woman was given to Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf who resisted having sexual intercourse with her until her menses were over and then he had sex with her by virtue of her being his property. Jubayr bin Mu'tim also received a slave girl, who was not impregnated. Talha ibn Ubaydullah had sexual intercourse with the female captive given to him. Abu Ubaydah ibn Jarrah impregnated the slave girl he was given.{{sfn|Faizer|2013|p=462}}

A delegation from the Hawazin tribe came to Muhammad and converted to Islam. Muhammad granted a general pardon against those who fought the Muslims at Hunayn.

Muhammad returned their women and children and their properties to them.{{sfn|Ibn Rashid|2015|p=68}} The girl who had been given to Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf was given a choice to stay with him or return to her family. She chose her family. Likewise, the girls given to Talha, Uthman, Ibn Umar and Safwan bin Umayya were also returned to their families.{{sfn|Faizer|2013|p=466}} Zaynab chose to return to her husband and cousin.{{sfn|Ibn al-Athir|1998}} However, the girl who had been given to Saad ibn Abi Waqas chose to stay with him. Uyanya had taken an old woman. Her son approached him to ransom her for 100 camels. The old woman asked her son why would he pay 100 camels when Uyanya would leave her anyway without taking ransom. This angered Uyanya.{{sfn|Faizer|2013|p=466}} Uyaynah had earlier said at the Siege of Ta'if that he only came to fight for Muhammad so he could get a Thaqif girl and impregnate her so that she might bear him a son because Thaqif are clever (or fortunate) people.{{sfn|Al-Tabari|1990|p=25}}{{sfn|Faizer|2013|p=459}} When Umar told Muhammad about Uyayna's comment, Muhammad smiled and said "[The man exhibits] an acceptable foolishness".{{sfn|Al-Tabari|1990|p=26}}{{sfn|Faizer|2013|p=459}}

=Umayyad Caliphate=

{{See also|Slavery in the Umayyad Caliphate}}

The expansion of concubinage under the Umayyad period was motivated mainly by the Umayyad tribal desire for sons rather than sanction for it in the Quran and Prophetic practice.{{sfn|Robinson|2020|p=107}} Concubinage was allowed among the Sassanian elites and the Mazdeans but the children from such unions were not necessarily regarded as legitimate.{{sfn|Robinson|2020|p=96–97}} The position of Jewish communities is unclear although slave concubinage is mentioned in Biblical texts. Apparently, the practice had declined long before Muhammad. Some Jewish scholars during Islamic rule would forbid Jews from having sex with their female slaves.{{sfn|Robinson|2020|p=96–97}} Leo III in his letter to Umar II accused Muslims of "debauchery" with their concubines who they would sell "like dumb cattle" after having tired of using them.{{sfn|Robinson|2020|p=96–97}} One Umayyad ruler, Abd al-Rahman III, was known to have possessed more than 6000 concubines.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=89}}

The hajin half-Arab sons of Muslim Arab men and their slave concubines were viewed differently depending on the ethnicity of their mothers. Abduh Badawi noted that "there was a consensus that the most unfortunate of the hajins and the lowest in social status were those to whom blackness had passed from their mothers", since a son of African mother more visibly recognizable as non-Arab than the son of a white slave mother, and consequently "son of a black woman" was used as an insult, while "son of a white woman" was used as a praise and as boasting.Lewis, B. (1990). Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry. Storbritannien: Oxford University Press. p. 40

=Abbasid Caliphate=

{{See also|Slavery in the Abbasid Caliphate}}

The royals and nobles during the Abbasid Caliphate kept large numbers of concubines. The Caliph Harun al-Rashid possessed hundreds of concubines in his harem. The Caliph al-Mutawakkil was reported to have owned four thousand concubines.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=89}} Slaves for pleasure were costly and were a luxury for wealthy men. In his sex manual, Ali ibn Nasr promoted experimental sex with female slaves on the basis that free wives were respectable and would feel humiliated by the use of the sex positions described in his book because they show low esteem and a lack of love from the man.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=203}} Women preferred that their husbands keep concubines instead of taking a second wife. This was because a co-wife represented a greater threat to their position. Owning many concubines was perhaps more common than having several wives.{{sfn|Myrne|2019|p=206}}

The child of a slave was born in to slavery unless an enslaver chose to acknowledge the child of a slave as his. A male enslaver could choose to officially acknowledge his son with his concubine if he wished to do so. If he choose to do so, the child would be automatically manumitted.

During the preceding Umayyad dynasty, sons born of wives and sons born of female slaves where not treated as equals: while the Umayyad Caliphs could acknowledge their sons with slave concubines, slave sons where not considered suitable as heirs to the throne until during the Abbasid dynasty.The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 2, AD 500-AD 1420. (2021). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 197

During the Abbasid dynasty, a number of Caliphs where the acknowledged sons of slave concubines.

During the Abbasid era, appointing the acknowledged sons of slave concubines as heirs became common, and from the 9th-century onward, acquiring male heirs through a slave concubine became a common custom for Abbasid citizens.The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 2, AD 500-AD 1420. (2021). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 198

If a man choose to acknowledge the child of a female slave as his, the slave mother became an umm walad. This meant that they could no longer sold and where to become manumitted upon the death of their enslaver; during the first centuries of Islam, umm walad-slaves where still bought and sold and rented out until the death of their enslaver, but during the Abbasid era this slowly stopped.The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 2, AD 500-AD 1420. (2021). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 199

Female slaves were graded sexually depending on their race by contemporary slave dealers and authors. Jābir ibn Ḥayyān wrote in the 9th-century:

:"Byzantines have cleaner vaginas than other female slaves have. Andalusians […] are the most beautiful, sweet-smelling and receptive to learning […] Andalusians and Byzantines have the cleanest vaginas, whereas Alans (Lāniyyāt) and Turks have unclean vaginas and get pregnant easier. They have also the worst dispositions. Sindhis, Indians, and Slavs (Ṣaqāliba) and those similar to them are the most condemned. They have uglier faces, fouler odor, and are more spiteful. Besides, they are unintelligent and difficult to control, and have unclean vaginas. East Africans (Zanj) are the most heedless and coarse. If one finds a beautiful, sound and graceful woman among them, however, no their species can match her. […] Women from Mecca (Makkiyāt) are the most beautiful and pleasurable of all types."Myrne, P. (2019). Slaves for Pleasure in Arabic Sex and Slave Purchase Manuals from the Tenth to the Twelfth Centuries. Journal of Global Slavery, 4(2), 196-225. https://doi.org/10.1163/2405836X-00402004

=Al-Andalus empires=

{{See also|Slavery in Al-Andalus}}

In Al-Andalus, the concubines of the Almoravid and Almohad Muslim elite were usually non-Muslim women from the Christian areas of the Iberian Peninsula. Many of these had been captured in raids or wars and were then gifted to the elite Muslim soldiers as war booty or were sold as slaves in Muslim markets.{{sfn|Bennison|2016|p=155–156}} In Muslim society in general, monogamy was common because keeping multiple wives and concubines was not affordable for many households. The practice of keeping concubines was common in the Muslim upper class. Muslim rulers preferred having children with concubines because it helped them avoid the social and political complexities arising from marriage and kept their lineages separate from the other lineages in society.{{sfn|Bennison|2016|p=155–156}}

In the 11th century, Christian forces in Al-Andalus captured Muslim women in turn, and included eight-year-old Muslim virgins as part of their war booty.{{sfn|Gleave|2015|p=171}} and kept them as concubines.{{sfn|Schaus|2006|p=593}} When Granada passed from Muslim rule to Christian rule, thousands of Moorish women were enslaved and trafficked to Europe.{{sfn|Capern|2019|p=22}} Muslim families tried to ransom their daughters, mothers and wives who had been captured and enslaved.{{sfn|Salzmann|2013|p=397}} For both Christians and Muslims, the capture of women from the other religion was a show of power, while the capture and sexual use of their own women by men of the other religion was a cause of shame.{{sfn|Bennison|2016|p=155–156}}

The most famous of the Andalusian harems was perhaps the harem of the Caliph of Cordoba. Except for the female relatives of the Caliph, the harem women consisted of his slave concubines. The slaves of the Caliph were often European saqaliba slaves trafficked from Northern or Eastern Europe. While male saqaliba could be given work in a number offices such as: in the kitchen, falconry, mint, textile workshops, the administration or the royal guard (in the case of harem guards, they were castrated), but female saqaliba were placed in the harem.{{cite book |first=Peter C. |last=Scales |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m-Wvg__iHPAC&pg=PA66 |page=66 |title=The Fall of the Caliphate of Córdoba: Berbers and Andalusis in Conflict |publisher=Brill |year=1993 |isbn=9789004098688}}

The harem could contain thousands of slave concubines; the harem of Abd al-Rahman I consisted of 6,300 women.{{cite book |title=Atlas of the Year 1000 |last=Man |first=John |year=1999 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=9780674541870 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j-CgtWP38nsC&pg=PA72 |page=72}} The saqaliba concubines were appreciated for their light skin.{{cite book |last=Ruiz |first=Ana |year=2007 |title=Vibrant Andalusia: The Spice of Life in Southern Spain |publisher=Algora Publishing |isbn=9780875865416 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qMBlwWbxq3kC&pg=PA35 |page=35}} The concubines (jawaris) were educated in accomplishments to make them attractive and useful for their master, and many became known and respected for their knowledge in a variety of subjects from music to medicine.

A jawaris concubine who gave birth to a child attained the status of an umm walad, and a favorite concubine was given great luxury and honorary titles such as in the case of Marjan, who gave birth to al-Hakam II, the heir of Abd al-Rahman III; he called her al-sayyida al-kubra (great lady).{{cite book |last=Barton |first=Simon |year=2015 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=9780812292114 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kNouBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA1 |page=1 |title=Conquerors, Brides, and Concubines: Interfaith Relations and Social Power in Medieval Iberia}}

Several concubines were known to have had great influence through their masters or their sons, notably Subh during the Caliphate of Cordoba, and Isabel de Solís during the Emirate of Granada.

However, concubines were always slaves subjected the will of their master. Caliph Abd al-Rahman III is known to have executed two concubines for reciting what he saw as inappropriate verses, and tortured another concubine with a burning candle in her face while she was held by two eunuchs after she refused sexual intercourse.Barton, S. (2015). Conquerors, Brides, and Concubines: Interfaith Relations and Social Power in Medieval Iberia. USA: University of Pennsylvania Press, Incorporated. p. 38

The concubines of Abu Marwan al-Tubni (d. 1065) were reportedly so badly treated that they conspired to murder him; women of the harem were also known to have been subjected to rape when rivaling factions conquered different palaces.

The rulers of the Nasrid dynasty of the Emirate of Granada (1232–1492) customarily married their cousins, but also kept slave concubines in accordance with Islamic custom. The identity of these concubines is unknown, but they were originally Christian women (rūmiyyas) bought or captured in expeditions in the Christian states of Northern Spain, and given a new name when they entered the royal harem.GALLARDO, BARBARA BOLOIX. “Beyond the Haram: Ibn Al-Khatib and His Privileged Knowledge of Royal Nasrid Women .” Praising the ‘Tongue of Religion’: Essays in Honor of the 700th Anniversary of Ibn al-Khaṭīb’s Birth (2014): n. pag. Print.

=Islamic Egypt=

File:A_slave_market_in_Cairo-David_Roberts.jpg, issued between 1845 and 1849, by David Roberts (painter).]]

{{See also|Slavery in Egypt}}

The consorts of the Caliphs of the Fatimid Caliphate (909-1171) were originally slave-girls whom the Caliph either married or used as concubines (sex slaves).Cortese, Delia; Calderini, Simonetta (2006). Women And the Fatimids in the World of Islam. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0748617329. The concubines in the Fatimid harem were in most cases of Christian origin, described as beautiful singers, dancers and musicians; they were often the subject of love poems, but also frequently accused of manipulating the Caliph.{{sfn|Cortese|Calderini|2006|p=76}}

The consorts of the Sultans of the Bahri dynasty (1250–1382) were originally slave girls. The female slaves were supplied to the Bahri harem by the slave trade as children; they could be trained to perform as singers and dancers in the harem, and some were selected to serve as concubines (sex slaves) of the Sultan, who in some cases chose to marry them.Levanoni, A. (2021). A Turning Point in Mamluk History: The Third Reign of Al-Nāsir Muḥammad Ibn Qalāwūn (1310-1341). Nederländerna: Brill. p. 184

During the Burji dynasty (1382–1517) the ruler of the Mamluk Sultanate often married free Muslim women of the Mamluk nobility. However, the Burji harem, as its predecessor, maintained the custom of slave concubinage, with Circassian slave girls being popular as concubines in the Burji harem.Albrecht Fuess, “How to marry right: Searching for a royal spouse at the Mamluk court of Cairo in the fifteenth century”, DYNTRAN Working Papers, n° 21, online edition, February 2017, available at: http://dyntran.hypotheses.org/1761

Sultan Qaitbay (r. 1468–1496) had a favorite Circassian slave concubine, Aṣalbāy, who became the mother of Sultan Al-Nasir Muhammad (r. 1496–1498) and later married Sultan Al-Ashraf Janbalat (r. 1500–1501).

Her daughter-in-law, Miṣirbāy (d. 1522), a former Circassian slave concubine, married in succession Sultan Al-Nasir Muhammad (r. 1496–1498), sultan Abu Sa'id Qansuh (r. 1498–1500), and in 1517 the Ottoman Governor Khā’ir Bek.

The Mamluk governor of Baghdad, Umar Pasha, died childless because his wife prevented him from having a concubine.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=81}} Writing in the early 18th century, one visitor noted that from among the Ottoman courtiers, only the imperial treasurer kept female slaves for sex and others thought of him as a lustful person.{{sfn|Kia|2011|p=199}}

Edward Lane, who visited Egypt in the 1830s, noted that very few Egyptian men were polygamous and most of the men with only one wife did not keep concubines, usually for the sake of domestic peace. However, some kept Abyssinian slaves who were less costly than maintaining a wife. While white slave-girls would be in the keep of wealthy Turks, the concubines kept by upper and middle class Egyptians were usually Abyssinians.{{sfn|Lewis|1992|p=74}}

The harem of the Muhammad Ali dynasty of the Khedivate of Egypt (1805–1914) was modelled after Ottoman example, the khedives being the Egyptian viceroys of the Ottoman sultans. Muhammad Ali was appointed vice roy of Egypt in 1805, and by Imperial Ottoman example assembled a harem of slave concubines in the Palace Citadel of Cairo.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=31–32}}

Similar to the Ottoman Imperial harem, the harem of the khedive was modelled on a system of polygyny based on slave concubinage, in which each wife or concubine was limited to having one son.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=20, 31}} The women harem slaves mostly came from Caucasus via the Circassian slave trade and were referred to as "white".{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=20, 25}}

A minority of the slave women were selected to become the personal servants (concubines) of the khedive, often selected by his mother:{{sfn|Cuno|2015|p=34}} they could become his wives, and would become free as an umm walad (or mustawlada) if they had children with their enslaver.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|p=24}}

However, the majority of the slave women served as domestics to his mother and wives.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=20, 42}}

The enslaved female servants of the khedivate harem were manumitted and married off with a trosseau in strategic marriages to the male freedmen or slaves (kul or mamluk) who were trained to become officers and civil servants as freedmen, in order to ensure the fidelity of their husband's to the khedive when they began their military or state official career.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=20, 26–27}}

The Egyptian elite of bureaucrat families, who emulated the khedive, had similar harem customs, and it was noted that it was common for Egyptian upper-class families to have slave women in their harem, which they manumitted to marry off to male protegees.{{sfn|Cuno|2015|pp=20, 26–27}}

=Ottoman Empire=

File:William Allan (1782-1850) - The Slave Market, Constantinople - NG 2400 - National Galleries of Scotland.jpg

File:Tizian 123.jpg (Roxalena) was the "favorite concubine" of Suleiman the Magnificent and later his wife.{{sfn|Smith|2008}} Suleiman became monogamous with her, breaking Ottoman custom.{{sfn|Peirce|1993|p=59}}]]

File:Jules Laurens 14.jpg, circa 1847|alt=Painting of seated women, with man standing]]

File:Rosati harem-dance.jpg

{{Main|Slavery_in_the_Ottoman_Empire#Ottoman_sexual_slavery|l1=Sexual slavery in the Ottoman Empire|Black Sea slave trade|Circassian slave trade|Cariye}}

The Ottoman rulers would keep hundreds, even thousands, of concubines in the Imperial harem. Most slaves in the Ottoman harem comprised women who had been kidnapped from Christian lands via the Barbary slave trade or the Crimean slave trade. Some had been abducted during raids by the Tatars while others had been captured by maritime pirates.{{sfn|Ard Boone|2018|p=58}} Female war captives were often turned into concubines for the Ottoman rulers. Ambitious slave families associated with the palace would also frequently offer their daughters up as concubines.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|pp=203–204}} The most highly desired slave-concubines in the Muslim world were not African women, but white girls, typically of Circassian or Georgian origin. However, they were very expensive.{{sfn|Miers|1975|p=56}} Both Circassian and Georgian women were systematically trafficked to eastern harems. This practice lasted into the 1890s.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|pp=203–204}}{{sfn|Yelbasi|2019|p=14}} Fynes Moryson noted that some Muslim men would keep their wives in various cities while others would keep them in a single house and would keep adding as many women as their lusts permitted. He wrote that "They buy free women to be their wives, or they buy 'conquered women' at a lesser price to be their concubines."{{sfn|Witte|2015|p=283}} Ottoman society had provided avenues for men who wished to have extramarital sex. They could either marry more wives while wealthy men could possess slaves and use them for sex.{{sfn|Kia|2011|p=206}}

Since the late 1300s Ottoman sultans would only permit heirs born from concubines to inherit their throne. Each concubine was only permitted to have one son. Once a concubine would bear a son she would spend the rest of her life plotting in favour of her son. If her son was to successfully become the next Sultan, she would become an unquestionable ruler. After the 1450s the Sultans stopped marrying altogether. Because of this there was great surprise when Sultan Sulayman fell in love with his concubine and married her. An Ottoman Sultan would have sexual relationships with only some women from his large collection of slave girls. This meant that a lot of the concubines were not given a family life if they were not desired by the Sultan. This effectively meant these women would have to spend the rest of their lives in virtual imprisonment. Some of these women would break the sharia by having homosexual relations.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=89}}

Research into Ottoman records show that polygamy was absent or rare in the 16th and 17th centuries.{{sfn|Irwin|2010|p=531}} Concubinage and polygamy were quite uncommon outside the elite. Goitein says that monogamy was a feature of the "progressive middle class" Muslims.{{sfn|Ahmed|1992|pp=107–}} In Sudan "By the Turco-Egyptian period, slave-owners represented a broad range of the socio-economic spectrum, and slave-owning was no longer a confine of the rich. A man of average wealth may have enjoyed the comfort that a few slaves brought, but would not have had a harem of the type mentioned above. Instead, in this context, the slave woman who baked the bread or looked after the children also may have received the master's sexual advances. Thus the average slave woman probably played a double role as labourer and concubine."{{Cite journal |last=Sharkey |first=Heather Jane |date=21 December 1992 |title=Domestic Slavery in the Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Northern Sudan |url=https://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5741/1/5741_3157.PDF |journal=Centre for Middle Eastern & Islamic Studies |publisher=University of Durham |pages=136 |via=Durham E-Theses}} Elite men were required to leave their wives and concubines if they wished to marry an Ottoman princess.{{sfn|Kia|2011|p=199}} Enslaved European men also narrated accounts of women who "apostasised". The life stories of these women were similar to Roxelana, who rose from being a Christian slave-girl into the chief advisor of her husband, Sultan Suleyman of the Ottoman Empire. There are several accounts of such women of humble birth who associated with powerful Muslim men. While the associations were initially forced, the captivity gave women a taste for access to power. Diplomats wrote with disappointment about apostate women who wielded political influence over their masters-turned-husbands. Christian male slaves also recorded the presence of authoritative convert women in Muslim families. Christian women who converted to Islam and then became politically assertive and tyrannical were regarded by Europeans as traitors to the faith.{{harvnb|Foster|2009|pp=57–60}}

The Islamic Law formally prohibited prostitution. However, "Slave girls most probably were a part of the sex trade in the Ottoman Empire. Dellals used to sell women and girls to the bazaars, dellals presented men the girls, but after 1 -2 days or a short time, after spending a day with women or children, the man returned them due to dissatisfaction. In Sharia law, this type of transaction was not an illegal action. Thus, the authorities had to use specific codes prohibiting the slavery, in the theoretical framework."{{Cite journal |last=BELLİ |first=BURCU |date=September 2020 |title=REGISTERED FEMALE PROSTITUTION IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE (1876-1909) |url=https://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12625661/index.pdf |journal=Graduate School of Social Sciences, Thesis |publisher=Middle East Technical University |pages=58 |via=OpenMETU}}

==Armenian genocide==

{{Main|Slavery_in_the_Ottoman_Empire#Sexual_slavery_in_the_Armenian_genocide|l1=Sexual Slavery in the Armenian genocide}}

During the Armenian genocide, which climaxed around 1915–16, numerous Armenian women were raped and subjected to sexual slavery, with women forced into prostitution or forcibly married to non-Armenians,{{sfn|Demirdjian|2016|p=126}} or sold as sex slaves to military officials.{{sfn|Crawford|2017|p=13}} International reports at the time testified to the imprisonment of Armenian women as sex slaves and the complicity of the authorities in the setting up of slave markets and sale of Armenians.{{sfn|Connellan|Fröhlich|2017|p=141-142}}

=Barbary Coast=

{{See also|Barbary slave trade|Slavery in Morocco|Slavery in Algeria| Slavery in Tunisia|Slavery in Libya }}

During Barbary pirate raids, Muslims enslaved an estimated 50–75,000 Christian women from Europe. Muslims took the slaves of non-Muslims when they won in battle.{{sfn|Capern|2019|p=22}} Many such women were consigned to household service, with some European concubines achieved significant political power through their masters. For example, one 17th-century British diplomat reported that a European concubine had become the de facto ruler of the city state of Algiers.{{vague|date=January 2022}}

This refer to Mohammed Trik, the Dey of Algiers, who in an English report from 1676 is noted to have been married to his former slave concubine, described as a "cunning covetous English woman, who would sell her soule for a Bribe", with whom the English viewed it as "chargeable to bee kept in her favour... for Countrysake".Bekkaoui, Khalid., White women captives in North Africa. Narratives of enslavement, 1735-1830, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2010, p. 172

European accounts typically condemned European concubines who converted to Islam as apostates, while praising women who bravely resisted the "depravity" of their Muslim masters. This kind of writing would later give rise to the "harem fantasy" in 19th-century orientalism. French general Thomas Robert Bugeaud wrote that children of concubines in Algeria were treated the same as other children and slaves enjoyed the same lifestyle as their owners.{{cite book|title=Slavery and Colonial Rule in Africa|editor=Martin A. Klein, Suzanne Miers|publisher=Taylor & Francis|page=39|year=2013|quote='They enjoy the same lifestyle; they are only rarely mistreated, the Arabs often marry black women, and children born of concubines are treated exactly as the others.'}}

In Morocco, most slaves were black,{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} and the 19th-century American journalist Stephen Bonsal remarked that high ranking Moroccan officials were sons of black concubines.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} Most Moroccan men remained monogamous as it was too expensive to have a concubine (or second wife),{{cite book|title=The Conquest of Morocco: A History|author=|page=34|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|year=2005}} while wealthy Moroccan men took concubines, and the sultans had large harems.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}

= Zanzibar =

{{See also|Slavery in Zanzibar}}

Richard Francis Burton wrote "Public prostitutes are here few, and the profession ranks low where the classes upon which it depends can always afford to gratify their propensities in the slave-market."{{Cite book |last=Burton |first=Richard Francis |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/69270/pg69270-images.html |title=ZANZIBAR: CITY, ISLAND, AND COAST. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. |date=1872 |publisher=TINSLEY BROTHERS |location=LONDON |pages=380 |language=en}} Abdul Sheriff writes that the foregoing suggests "the easy availability of slave secondary wives affected even the oldest profession."{{Cite book |last=Sheriff |first=Abdul |url=https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/52811/1/external_content.pdf |title=Sex, Power, and Slavery |date=2014 |publisher=Ohio University Press |isbn=978-0-8214-4490-0 |editor-last=Campbell |editor-first=Gwyn |location=Athens, Ohio |pages=101 |language=en |chapter=Suria: Concubine or Secondary Slave Wife? The Case of Zanzibar in the Nineteenth Century |editor-last2=Elbourne |editor-first2=Elizabeth}}

In 1844 the British Consul noted that there were 400 free Arab women and 800 men in Zanzibar and "the puritanical first American consul, Richard Waters, recorded in his journal in 1837 that he lectured Zanzibaris that “they commit adultery and fornication by keeping three to four, and sometimes six and eight concubines,” and Seyyid Said told the British consul, “Arabs won’t work; they must have slaves and concubines.”"{{Cite book |last=Sharif |first=Abdul |url=https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/52811/1/external_content.pdf |title=Sex, Power, and Slavery |date=2014 |publisher=Ohio University Press |isbn=978-0-8214-4490-0 |editor-last=Campbell |editor-first=Gwyn |location=Athens, Ohio |pages=103 |language=en |chapter=Suria: Concubine or Secondary Slave Wife? The Case of Zanzibar in the Nineteenth Century |editor-last2=Elbourne |editor-first2=Elizabeth}}

Additionally "It is widely believed that the only wife of Sultan Barghash of Zanzibar (r. 1870–88) had made a compact with her husband that he could enjoy as many sarari as he wished but that none of their offspring would be recognized as legitimate. And it is true that all his children issued from his only free wife, although he is known to have had dozens of sarari. According to one of them, a pregnant suria was thrown out of the palace as soon as she conceived, which was illegal according to Islamic law."{{Cite book |last=Sheriff |first=Abdul |url=https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/52811/1/external_content.pdf |title=Sex, Power, and Slavery |date=2014 |publisher=Ohio University Press |isbn=978-0-8214-4490-0 |editor-last=Campbell |editor-first=Gwyn |location=Athens, Ohio |pages=103 |language=en |chapter=Suria: Concubine or Secondary Slave Wife? The Case of Zanzibar in the Nineteenth Century |editor-last2=Elbourne |editor-first2=Elizabeth}}

= Arabia =

In late-1800s and early-1900s Arabia, "In theory, under Islamic law, children of female concubines had a legally recognized status as free descendants of their fathers. In practice, however, this was often not the case. Masters regularly exchanged female concubines, often for periods as brief as seven to ten days. In a number of cases, when the woman was discovered to be pregnant, she was given in marriage to a male slave and her child treated as the child of slaves. In other cases, the pregnant concubine was sold far away, where the child would not interfere with the father’s personal life."{{Cite book |last=Hopper |first=Matthew S. |url=https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/52811/1/external_content.pdf |title=Sex, Power, and Slavery |date=2014 |publisher=Ohio University Press |isbn=978-0-8214-4490-0 |editor-last=Campbell |editor-first=Gwyn |location=Athens, Ohio |pages=175 |language=en |chapter=Slavery, Family Life, and the African Diaspora in the Arabian Gulf, 1880–1940 |editor-last2=Elbourne |editor-first2=Elizabeth}}

Practice in Asia

=Delhi Sultanate=

{{See also|Slavery in the Delhi Sultanate}}

The Muslim Sultanates in India before the Mughal Empire captured large numbers of non-Muslims from the Deccan. The children of Muslim masters and non-Muslim concubines would be raised as Muslims.{{sfn|Hardy|1972|p=9}} When Muslims would surround Rajput citadels, the Rajput women would commit jauhar (collective suicide) to save themselves from being dishonoured by their enemies. In 1296 approximately 16,000 women committed jauhar to save themselves from Alauddin Khalji's army.{{sfn|Roy|2012|p=182}} Rajput women would commit it when they saw that defeat and enslavement was imminent for their people. In 1533 in Chittorgarh nearly 13,000 women and children killed themselves instead of being taken captive by Bahadur Shah's army.{{sfn|Kitts|2018|p=143–144}} For them rape was the worst form of humiliation. Rajputs practised jauhar mainly when their opponents were Muslims.{{sfn|Naravane|1999|p=45}}

=Timurids=

Historical records show that numerous royal concubines of the Timurid harem were not slaves, but free women from prestigious Muslim families.{{sfn|Hamid|2017|p=190}} The reason for that is men were only allowed a maximum of four wives,{{sfn|Hamid|2017|p=192}} so instead they would secure additional marital alliances through concubinage instead. Likewise 15th-century texts from the region advise princes to seek marital alliances through unions with noble women as opposed to with a female slave.{{sfn|Hamid|2017|p=192}} Taking free women as concubines was condemned by some contemporaries.{{sfn|Hamid|2017|p=193}}

=Mughal Empire=

{{See also|Slavery in the Mughal Empire}}

File:Akbar_und_die_T%C3%A4nzerinnen_von_Baz_Bahadur.jpg]]

Under the Mughal Empire, the royalty and nobility kept concubines in addition to wives.{{sfn|Sharma|2016|p=57–59}} While concubines are often a feature of royal households, Mughal harems stood out for their elaborateness, size and pomp.{{sfn|Bano|1999|p=354}} Francisco Pelseart describes that noblemen kept both wives and concubines, who lived in extravagant quarters.{{sfn|Lal|2005|p=40}} Early Mughal harems were small, but Akbar had a harem of more than 5000 women and Aurangzeb's harem was even larger.{{sfn|Bano|1999|p=354}} Mughals attempted to suppress slavery, with emperor Akbar forbidding enslavement of women and children in 1562, prohibiting slave trade, and freeing thousands of his own slaves.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=90}} However, Akbar wasn't always consistent and may have kept his own concubines.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=90}} After Akbar's death there was a return to older patterns, such as Jahangir taking the wives and daughters of a rebel into his harem and soldiers enslaving women from rebellious villages,{{sfn|Bano|1999|p=354}} but the sale of slaves remained banned.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=91}} Ahmad Shah Abdali's army captured Maratha women to fill Afghan harems.{{sfn|Singh|2006|p=68}} The Sikhs attacked Abdali and rescued 22,000 Maratha girls.{{sfn|Singh|2015|p=78}} Ovington, a voyager who wrote about his journey to Surat, stated that Muslim men had an "extraordinary liberty for women" and kept as many concubines as they could afford.{{sfn|Sharma|2016|p=57–59}} The nobles in India could possess as many concubines as they wanted.{{sfn|Bano|1999|p=357}} Ismail Quli Khan, a Mughal noble, possessed 1200 girls. Another nobleman, Said, had many wives and concubines from whom he fathered 60 sons in just four years.{{sfn|Bano|1999|p=361}}

Lower class Muslims were generally monogamous. Since they hardly had any rivals, women of the lower and middle class sections of society fared better than upper-class women who had to contend with their husbands' other wives, slave-girls and concubines.{{sfn|Sharma|2016|p=61}} A wife could enforce that her husband remain monogamous, by stipulating in the Islamic marriage contract that the husband was not allowed to take another wife or concubine. Such conditions were "commonplace" among middle-class Muslims in Surat in the 1650s.{{sfn|Faroqhi|2019|p=244}}

There is no evidence that concubinage was practiced in Kashmir where, unlike the rest of the medieval Muslim world, slavery was abhorred and not widespread. Except for the Sultans, there is no evidence that the Kashmiri nobility or merchants kept slaves.{{sfn|Hasan|2005|p=244}} In medieval Punjab the Muslim peasants, artisans, small tradesmen, shopkeepers, clerks and minor officials could not afford concubines or slaves,{{sfn|Gandhi|2007|p=19}} but the Muslim nobility of medieval Punjab, such as the Khans and Maliks, kept concubines and slaves. Female slaves were used for concubinage in many wealthy Muslim households of Punjab.{{sfn|Grewal|1998|p=11–12}}

Colonial court cases from 19th-century Punjab show that the courts recognised the legitimate status of children born to Muslim zamindars (landlords) from their concubines.{{sfn|Tremlett|1869|pp=244–}} The Muslim rulers of Indian princely states, such as the Nawab of Junagadh, also kept slave girls.{{sfn|Chattopadhyay|1959|p=126}} The Nawab of Bahawalpur, according to a Pakistani journalist, kept 390 concubines. He only had sex with most of them once.{{sfn|Weiss|2004|p=190}} Marathas captured during their wars with the Mughals had been given to the soldiers of the Mughal Army from the Baloch Bugti tribe. The descendants of these captives became known as "Mrattas" and their women were traditionally used as concubines by the Bugtis. They became equal citizens of Pakistan in 1947.{{sfn|Lieven|2012|p=362}}

Abolition in the Muslim World

While classical Islamic law permitted slavery, the abolition movement starting in the late 18th century in England and later in other Western countries influenced slavery in Muslim lands both in doctrine and in practice.{{sfn|Brunschvig|1960|p=26}} According to Smith "the majority of the faithful eventually accepted abolition as religiously legitimate and an Islamic consensus against slavery became dominant", though this continued to be disputed by some literalists.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|pp=219–221}}{{sfn|Brockopp|2006|p=60}}

During the 20th century, the issue of chattel slavery was addressed and investigated globally by international bodies created by the League of Nations and the United Nations, such as the Temporary Slavery Commission in 1924–1926, the Committee of Experts on Slavery in 1932, and the Advisory Committee of Experts on Slavery in 1934–1939.Miers, S. (2003). Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem. USA: AltaMira Press.

By the time of the UN Ad Hoc Committee on Slavery in 1950–1951, legal chattel slavery still existed only in the Arabian Peninsula: in Oman, in Qatar, in Saudi Arabia, in the Trucial States and in Yemen. Legal chattel slavery was finally abolished in the Arabian Peninsula in the 1960s: Saudi Arabia and Yemen in 1962, in Dubai in 1963, and Oman as the last in 1970.

The big royal harems in the Muslim world begun to dissolve in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, often due to either abolition or modernization of the Muslim monarchies, where the royal women where given a public role and no longer lived in seclusion. The Ottoman Imperial harem, the harem of the Muhammad Ali dynasty of Egypt, as well as the Qajar harem of Persia where all dissolved in the early 20th century. In other cases, the custom lasted longer.

Chattel slavery, and thus the existence of secluded harem concubines, lasted longer in some Islamic states. The report of the Advisory Committee of Experts on Slavery (ACE) about Hadhramaut in Yemen in the 1930s described the existence of Chinese girls (Mui tsai) trafficked from Singapore for enslavement as concubines,Miers, S. (2003). Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem. Storbritannien: AltaMira Press. 270 and the King and Imam of Yemen, Ahmad bin Yahya (r. 1948–1962), were reported to have had a harem of 100 slave women.LIFE - 19 February 1965 - page 98

Sultan Said bin Taimur of Oman (r. 1932–1970) reportedly owned around 500 slaves, an estimated 150 of whom were women, who were kept at his palace at Salalah.Cobain, Ian, The history thieves: secrets, lies and the shaping of a modern nation, Portobello Books, London, 2016

In the 20th century, women and girls for the harem market in the Arabian Peninsula were kidnapped not only from Africa and Baluchistan, but also from the Trucial States, the Nusayriyah Mountains in Syria, and the Aden Protectorate.Emancipating “The Unfortunates”: The Anti-slavery Society, the United States, the United Nations, and the Decades-Long Fight to Abolish the Saudi Arabian Slave Trade. DeAntonis, Nicholas J. Fordham University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2021. 28499257. p. 1–3 In 1943, it was reported that girls lower in the Baluchi hierarchical nature were shipped via Oman to Mecca, where they were popular as concubines since Caucasian girls were no longer available, and were sold for $350–450.Miers, Suzanne (2003). Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem. Rowman Altamira. ISBN 978-0-7591-0340-5. p. 304–307 They belonged to the lower social and economic classes. The dealers were mostly wealthy Baluchs from Makran, Jask, Bahu and Dashtiyari.{{Cite book |last=Mirzai |first=Behnaz A. |title=A history of slavery and emancipation in Iran, 1800-1929 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Texas Press |pages=83 |quote="Similarly, slave dealers from the Jask district and Jadgals from Bahu and Dashtiyari kidnapped or purchased enslaved Africans and lower class Baluchis"}}{{Cite book |last=Mirzai |first=Behnaz A. |title=A history of slavery and emancipation in Iran, 1800-1929 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Texas press |pages=83, 85 |quote="In 1921, Baluchis who were living between Chabahar and Jask were still being kidnapped by Makrani local chiefs and by Baluchis from the Batinah coast and then exported to Oman, present day United Arab Emirates and Qatar to be sold."}}

Harem concubines existed in Saudi Arabia until the very end of the abolition of slavery in Saudi Arabia in 1962.

King Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia (r. 1932-1953) are known to have had a harem of twenty-two women, many of them concubines.Illahi, M. (2018). Doctrine of Terror: Saudi Salafi Religion. Australien: FriesenPress. p.119-120 Baraka Al Yamaniyah (died 22 August 2018), for example, was the concubine of King Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia (r. 1932-1953) and the mother of Muqrin bin Abdulaziz (born 1945), who was crown prince of Saudi Arabia in 2015.{{cite news|title=Proud of trust reposed in me by King: Muqrin|url=http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20130202151557|accessdate=2 February 2013|newspaper=Saudi Gazette|date=2 February 2013|author=Abdullah Al Harthi|author2=Khaled Al Faris|location=Jeddah and Riyadh|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131102140125/http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20130202151557|archive-date=2 November 2013|url-status=dead}}{{cite news|author=Simon Henderson|title=Who Will Be the Next King of Saudi Arabia?|url=http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/who-will-be-the-next-king-of-saudi-arabia|accessdate=2 April 2013|newspaper=The Washington Institute|date=13 February 2013}}{{Cite news |last=Riedel |first=Bruce |date=2013-02-03 |title=With Prince Muqrin's Appointment, Saudi Succession Crisis Looms |language=en |work=The Daily Beast |url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/02/03/with-prince-muqrin-s-appointment-saudi-succession-crisis-looms |access-date=2023-04-09}}

In August 1962, the king's son Prince Talal stated that he had decided to free his 32 slaves and fifty slave concubines.Suzanne Miers: Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem, p. 348–49

After the abolition of slavery in Saudi Arabia in 1962, the Anti-Slavery International and the Friends World Committee expressed their appreciation over the emancipation edict of 1962, but did ask if any countries would be helped to find their own nationals in Saudi harems who might want to return home; this was a very sensitive issue, since there was an awareness that women were enslaved as concubines (sex slaves) in the seclusion of the harems, and that there were no information as to whether the abolition of slavery had affected them.Miers, S. (2003). Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem. USA: AltaMira Press. p. 362

Colonial governments and independent Muslim states restricted slave raids and the slave trade in response to pressure from Western liberals and nascent Muslim abolitionist movements. Eliminating slavery was an even more difficult task. Many Muslim governments had refused to sign the international treaties against slavery which the League of Nations was co-ordinating since 1926. This refusal was also an issue at the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and at the 1956 Anti-Slavery Convention.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=11}} It was mostly because of the pressure from European colonial powers and economic changes that slavery was abolished. While the institution was eventually abolished, there was no internally well-developed Islamic narrative against slave-ownership.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=53–54}}

In the 1830s, a group of ulama led by Waji al-Din Saharanpuri issued a fatwa that it was lawful to enslave even those men and women "who sought refuge" after battle. Sayyed Imdad Ali Akbarabadi led ulama in publishing a lot of material in defence of traditional kinds of slavery. Sayyid Muhammad Askari condemned the idea of abolishing slavery.{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=135}} In the 19th century, some ulama in Cairo refused to allow slave girls, who had been freed under secular law, to marry unless they had obtained permission from their owner. After 1882 the Egyptian ulama refused to prohibit slavery on the grounds that the Prophet had never forbidden it. In 1899 a scholar from Al-Azhar, Shaykh Muhammad Ahmad al-Bulayqi implicitly defended concubinage and refuted modernist arguments.{{harvnb|Clarence-Smith|2006|pp=138–141}} Most ulama in West Africa opposed abolition. They ruled that concubinage was still allowed with women of slave descent.{{harvnb|Clarence-Smith|2006|pp=144–147}}

{{quote box|align=right|width=34%|style=min-width:15em|quote=Female slavery, being a condition necessary to the legality of this coveted indulgence [concubinage], will never be put down, with a willing or hearty co-operation by any Mussalman community.|source=William Muir, Life of Mahomet.{{sfn|Powell|2006|p=277–278}}}}

Ehud R. Toledano states that abolitionist views were very rare in Muslim societies and that there was no indigenous abolitionist narrative in the Muslim world. According to Toledano, the first anti-slavery views came from Syed Ahmad Khan in the subcontinent. The next anti-slavery texts are to be found, from the 1920s onwards, in the works of non-ulema who were writing outside the realm of Islamic tradition and Shariah. According to Amal Ghazal, the abolitionist stances of modernist ulema in Egypt such as Muhammad 'Abduh and his disciples were strongly opposed by the majority of Islamic jurists. While 'Abduh took a stand in favour of abolition, he noted that only a gradualist approach, which encouraged manumission, would work because slavery itself was sanctioned in Islamic law.{{sfn|Toledano|2013|p=121–123}}

While in the late 19th century some Indian Muslim modernists had rejected the legitimacy of slavery in Islam, a reformist take on slavery was a part of regenerated Indian Muslim thinking in the 1860s and 1870s.{{sfn|Powell|2006|p=262–264}} Syed Ahmad Khan and Syed Ameer Ali were primarily concerned with refuting Western criticism of Islamic slavery. However, they did not directly refute the European criticism about female slavery and concubinage.{{sfn|Powell|2006|p=269}} According to Dilawar Husain Ahmad, polygamy and concubinage were responsible for "Muslim decline".{{harvnb|Powell|2006|p=275}} Chiragh Ali denied the Qur'anic permission for concubinage. However, he accepted William Muir's view that Muslims would not abandon female slavery willingly, but he asserted that Islamic jurists did not allow concubinage with the female slaves being imported from Africa, Central Asia and Georgia in that time. However, he did not specify who these Islamic jurists were.{{sfn|Powell|2006|p=277–278}} Syed Ahmad Khan was opposed by the ulama on a number of issues, including his views on slavery.

In 1911 one Qadi in Mombasa ruled that no government can free a slave without the owner's permission. Spencer Trimingham observed that in coastal Arab areas masters continued to take concubines from slave families because the descendants of slaves are still considered to be enslaved under religious law even if they had been freed according to secular law. The Ottoman ulama maintained the permissibility of slavery due to its Islamic legal sanction. They rejected demands by Young Ottomans for fatwas to ban slavery.

In Pakistan, where the Deobandi Islamic revivalist movement is prevalent, the ulama called for the revival of slavery in 1947. The wish to enslave enemies and take concubines was noted in the Munir Commission Report. When Zia ul Haq came to power in 1977 and started applying sharia, some argued that the reward for freeing slaves meant that slavery should not be abolished "since to do so would be to deny future generations the opportunity to commit the virtuous deed of freeing slaves."{{sfn|Clarence-Smith|2006|p=189}} Similarly, many ulama in Mauritania did not recognise the legitimacy of abolishing slavery. In 1981 a group of ulama argued that only owners could free their slaves and that the Mauritanian government was breaking a fundamental religious rule. In 1997 one Mauritanian scholar stated that abolition

... is contrary to the teachings of the fundamental text of Islamic law, the Koran... [and] amounts to the expropriation from Muslims of their goods, goods that were acquired legally. The state, if it is Islamic, does not have the right to seize my house, my wife or my slave.

The translator of Ibn Kathir's treatise on slaves, Umar ibn Sulayman Hafyan, felt obliged to explain why he published a slave treatise when slavery no longer exists. He states that just because slavery no longer exists does not mean that the laws about slavery have been abrogated. Moreover, slavery was only abolished half a century ago and could return in the future. His comments were a reflection of the predicament modern Muslims find themselves in.{{sfn|Majied|2017|p=304}}

Modern Muslim perspectives

Today, most ordinary Muslims ignore the existence of slavery and concubinage in Islamic history and texts. Most also ignore the millennia-old consensus permitting it and a few writers even claim that those Islamic jurists who allowed sexual relations outside marriage with female slaves were mistaken.{{sfn|Hazelton|2010|p=106–108}} Ahmed Hassan, a 20th-century translator of Sahih Muslim, who prefaced the translated chapter on marriage by claiming that Islam only allows sex within marriage. This was despite the fact that the same chapter included many references to Muslim men having sex with slave-girls.{{sfn|Hazelton|2010|p=106–108}} Muhammad Asad also rejected the notion of any sexual relationship outside of marriage.{{sfn|Asad|1980|p=107}} Ali notes that one reason for this defensive attitude may lie with the desire to argue against the common Western media portrayal of "Islam as uniquely oppressive toward women" and "Muslim men as lascivious and wanton toward sexually controlled females".{{sfn|Hazelton|2010|p=106–108}}

Asifa Quraishi-Landes observes that most Muslims believe that sex is only permissible within marriage and they ignore the permission for keeping concubines in Islamic jurisprudence.{{sfn|Quraishi-Landes|2016|p=182}} Furthermore, the majority of modern Muslims are not aware that Islamic jurists had made an analogy between the marriage contract and sale of concubines and many modern Muslims would be offended by the idea that a husband owns his wife's private parts under Islamic law. She notes that "Muslims around the world nevertheless speak of marriage in terms of reciprocal and complementary rights and duties, mutual consent, and with respect for women's agency" and "many point to Muslim scripture and classical literature to support these ideals of mutuality — and there is significant material to work with. But formalizing these attitudes in enforceable rules is much more difficult."{{sfn|Quraishi-Landes|2016|p=182}} She personally concludes that she is "not convinced that sex with one's slave is approved by the Quran in the first place", claiming that reading the respective Quranic section has led her to "different conclusions than that held by the majority of classical Muslim jurists."{{sfn|Quraishi-Landes|2016|p=178}} She agrees "with Kecia Ali that the slavery framework and its resulting doctrine are not dictated by scripture".{{sfn|Quraishi-Landes|2016|p=174}}

Cognitive scientist Steven Pinker noted in The Better Angels of Our Nature that despite the de jure abolitions of slavery by Islamic countries in the 20th century,{{sfn|Pinker|2011|p=153}} the majority of the countries where human trafficking still occurs are Muslim-majority,{{sfn|Pinker|2011|p=363}} while political scientists Valerie M. Hudson and Bradley Thayer have noted that Islam is the only major religious tradition that still allows polygyny.{{sfn|Hudson|Thayer|2010|pp=48–53}}

Modern parallels

Since slavery existed in some states of the Muslim world until the mid-20th century, concubinage existed in some Muslim countries as late as the 1960s. For instance, a large number of women lower in the Baluch hierarchical nature (Afro-Baluchshttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/271573750_Baluchi_Experiences_Under_Slavery_and_the_Slave_Trade_of_the_Gulf_of_Oman_and_the_Persian_Gulf_1921-1950{{Cite book |last=Mirzai |first=Behnaz A. |title=A history of slavery and emancipation in Iran, 1800-1929 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Texas press |pages=83 |quote="Similarly, slave dealers from the Jask district and Jadgals from Bahu and Dashtyari kidnapped or pur- chased enslaved Africans and low-class Baluchis in Bahu Kalat in Dasht, then sold them to the Omani merchants who had travel;ed there."}} and low class Baluchs){{Cite book |last=Mirzai |first=Behnaz A. |title=A history of slavery and emancipation in Iran, 1800-1929 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Texas Press |pages=83 |quote="The hierarchical nature of Baluchi communities meant that those enslaved generally came from the lower social and economic groups."}} were kidnapped in the first half of the 20th century by slave traders and sold for sex across the Persian Gulf in settlements such as Sharjah,{{sfn|Suzuki|2013|p=214–219}} where slavery in the Trucial States was legal until 1963.{{cite journal | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4284003 | jstor=4284003 | title=On the Road towards Unity: The Trucial States from a British Perspective, 1960-66 | last1=Joyce | first1=Miriam | journal=Middle Eastern Studies | date=1999 | volume=35 | issue=2 | pages=45–60 | doi=10.1080/00263209908701266 | url-access=subscription }}

After the abolition of slavery in Muslim countries in the 19th and 20th centuries, however, there have been a number of examples of the revival of concubinage or slavery-like practices in the Muslim world.

During the partition of India, some of the violence against women resembled concubinage with religious undertones,{{sfn|Collins|Lapierre|1975|p=336}} with some women being kept captives as forced wives and concubines.{{sfn|Khan|2007|p=135}}{{sfn|Khan|2007|p=39}} According to some accounts, non-Muslim women captured by the Pakistan Army would be forcibly converted to Islam to be "worthy" of their captors' harems.{{sfn|Collins|Lapierre|1975|p=336}} In Kashmir, Pashtun tribesmen allegedly captured a large number of non-Muslim girls from Kashmir and sold them as slave-girls in West Punjab.{{sfn|Major|1995|p=62}} The violence was paralleled on both sides of the conflict, with Muslim girls in East Punjab also being taken by and distributed among the Sikh jathas, Indian military and police for sex and sold on multiple times.{{sfn|Major|1995|p=63}} The governments of India and Pakistan later agreed to restore Hindu and Sikh women to India and Muslim women to Pakistan.{{sfn|Metcalf|Metcalf|2012|p=226}}

In Afghanistan, reportedly one of the atrocities committed by the Taliban was the enslavement of women for use as concubines.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=53–54}}{{sfn|Claus|Diamond|Mills|2003|p=7}} In 1998, eyewitnesses in Afghanistan reported that hundreds of girls in Kabul and elsewhere had been abducted by Taliban fighters.{{sfn|Nojumi|2016|p=168}} One source suggests that up to 400 women were involved in the abductions across Afghanistan. However the Taliban vehemently denied all these claims as propaganda against them by their enemies in Afghanistan.{{sfn|Rashid|2010|pp=75–}}

During the 1983-2005 Second Sudanese Civil War, the Sudanese army also revived the use of enslavement as a weapon against the South,{{sfn|Jok|2010|p=32}} particularly against black Christian prisoners of war,{{sfn|Islam's Black Slaves|2001|p=138}} on the purported basis that Islamic law allowed it.{{sfn|Ali|2015a|p=53–54}} In raids by Janjaweed militias on black Christian villages, thousands of women and children were taken captive,{{sfn|Jok|2010|p=26}} with some (Dinka girls) kept in Northern Sudanese households for use as sex slaves,{{sfn|Jok|2010|p=35}} while others sold in slave markets as far afield as Libya.{{sfn|Islam's Black Slaves|2001|p=138}}

In the 21st century, when ISIL fighters attacked the city of Sinjar in 2014, they kidnapped and raped local women.{{sfn|Winterton|2014}} ISIL's extremist agenda extended to women's bodies and that women living under their control, with fighters being told that they were theologically sanctioned to have sex with non-Muslim captive women.{{sfn|Susskind|2014}}

=Muslim community response=

The justifications for modern reiterations of slavery and violence against women, most notably in the context of ISIL, have been vocally condemned by Islamic scholars from around the world at the time.{{sfn|Callimachi|2015}}{{sfn|Tharoor|2015}}{{sfn|El-Masri|2018|pp=1047–1066}}

In response to the Nigerian extremist group Boko Haram's Quranic justification for kidnapping and enslaving people,{{sfn|Lister|2014}}{{sfn|Ferran|2014}} and ISIL's religious justification for enslaving Yazidi women as spoils of war as claimed in their digital magazine Dabiq,{{sfn|McDuffee|2014}}{{sfn|Abdelaziz|2014}}{{sfn|Spencer|2014}} 126 Islamic scholars from around the Muslim world signed an open letter in September 2014 to the Islamic State's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi decrying his group's interpretations of the Qur'an and hadith.{{sfn|Markoe|2013}}{{sfn|Smith|2014}} The letter also accused the group of committing sedition by re-instituting slavery under its rule in contravention of the anti-slavery consensus of the Islamic scholarly community.{{sfn|Open Letter to Al-Baghdadi|2014}}

See also

References

=Notes=

{{notelist}}

=Citations=

{{Reflist|20em}}

=Sources=

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| title = Real Lives in the Sixteenth Century: A Global Perspective

| last = Ard Boone

| first = Rebecca

| publisher = Taylor & Francis

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=WUxWDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT58

| date = 19 April 2018

| isbn = 978-1-351-13533-7

}}

  • {{Cite book

| title = The Message of the Qur'ān

| last = Asad

| first = Muhammad

| year = 1980

| publisher = Dar Al-Andalus Limited

| url = https://quran-archive.org/explorer/muhammad-asad

| isbn = 061421062-3

| at = Commentary on Chapter 4. Verse 25. Note 32

| quote = This passage lays down in an unequivocal manner that sexual relations with female slaves are permitted only on the basis of marriage, and that in this respect there is no difference between them and free women; consequently, concubinage is ruled out.

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Sexual Violation in Islamic Law: Substance, Evidence, and Procedure

| last = Azam

| first = Hina

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=fhy_CQAAQBAJ&pg=PA69

| date = 26 June 2015

| isbn = 978-1-107-09424-6

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Islamic Jurisprudence on the Regulation of Armed Conflict: Text and Context

| last = Badawi

| first = Nesrine

| publisher = BRILL

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=6MC0DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA17

| date = 1 October 2019

| isbn = 978-90-04-41062-6

}}

  • {{cite journal | title = Marriage and Concubinage in the Mughal Imperial Family

| last = Bano | first = Shadab

| journal = Proceedings of the Indian History Congress

| year = 1999 | volume = 60

}}

  • {{cite book| title = That Most Precious Merchandise: The Mediterranean Trade in Black Sea Slaves, 1260-1500

| last = Barker | first = Hannah | year = 2019

| publisher = University of Pennsylvania Press

| isbn = 978-0-812-25154-8

|title-link=That Most Precious Merchandise: The Mediterranean Trade in Black Sea Slaves, 1260-1500

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Modern Genocide: The Definitive Resource and Document Collection [4 volumes]: The Definitive Resource and Document Collection

| last1 = Bartrop

| first1 = Paul R.

| last2 = Leonard

| first2 = Steven

| publisher = ABC-CLIO

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=JB4UBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA1866

| date = 17 December 2014

| pages = 1866–

| isbn = 978-1-61069-364-6

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = White Women Captives in North Africa: Narratives of Enslavement, 1735-1830

| last = Bekkaoui

| first = K.

| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan UK

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=kyB9DAAAQBAJ&pg=PA10

| date = 24 November 2010

| isbn = 978-0-230-29449-3

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade

| last1 = Bellagamba

| first1 = Alice

| last2 = Greene

| first2 = Sandra Elaine

| last3 = Klein

| first3 = Martin A.

| author-link3 = Martin A. Klein

| author2-link = Sandra Elaine Greene

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Z6qxCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA24

| date = 14 April 2016

| isbn = 978-0-521-19961-2

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Almoravid and Almohad Empires

| last = Bennison

| first = Amira K.

| author-link = Amira Bennison

| publisher = Edinburgh University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=19JVDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA155

| date = 1 August 2016

| isbn = 978-0-7486-4682-1

}}

  • {{cite book |last1=Bloom |first1=Jonathan |last2=Blair |first2=Sheila |title=Islam: A Thousand Years of Faith and Power |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2002 |isbn=0-300-09422-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780300094220 }}
  • {{cite book

| title = Women in Muslim Societies: Diversity Within Unity

| last1 = Bodman

| first1 = Herbert L.

| last2 = Tawḥīdī

| first2 = Nayyirah

| year = 1998

| publisher = Lynne Rienner Publishers

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=PFzdA2Hini4C&pg=PA208

| pages = 208–209

| isbn = 978-1-55587-578-7

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Women and Islam: Myths, Apologies, and the Limits of Feminist Critique

| last = Bouachrine

| first = Ibtissam

| publisher = Lexington Books

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=fxavAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA8

| date = 21 May 2014

| isbn = 978-0-7391-7907-9

}}

  • {{cite book | first = Harold | last = Bowen | title = The Life and Times of ʿAlí Ibn ʿÍsà, 'The Good Vizier' | year = 1928 | publisher = Cambridge University Press | url = https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.80474 | oclc = 982525160 }}
  • {{cite book

| title = Early Mālikī Law: Ibn ʻAbd Al-Ḥakam and His Major Compendium of Jurisprudence

| last = Brockopp

| first = Jonathan E.

| publisher = BRILL

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ciSskcBCi3EC

| date = 1 January 2000

| isbn = 90-04-11628-1

}}

  • {{Cite encyclopedia| title = Slaves and slavery

| last = Brockopp | first = Jonathan E. | year = 2006

| encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān

| editor-last = Dammen | editor-first = Jane

| publisher = Brill

| volume = 5 | page = 60

}}

  • {{cite book| title = Slavery and Islam

| last = Brown | first = Jonathan A. C. | year = 2019

| author-link = Jonathan A.C. Brown

| publisher = Simon & Schuster

| page = 70

}}

  • {{Cite encyclopedia| title = ʿAbd

| edition = 2nd

| last = Brunschvig | first = R. | year = 1960

| encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia of Islam

| editor1-last = Bearman | editor1-first = P.

| editor2-last = Bianquis | editor2-first = Th.

| editor3-last = Bosworth | editor3-first = C. E.

| editor4-last = Heinrichs | editor4-first = W. P.

| publisher = Brill

| volume = 1 | page = 26

| doi = 10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0003

}}

  • {{cite news

| title = ISIS Enshrines a Theology of Rape

| last = Callimachi

| first = Rukmini

| newspaper = The New York Times

| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/14/world/middleeast/isis-enshrines-a-theology-of-rape.html

| date = 13 August 2015

| access-date = 15 September 2020

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The Routledge History of Women in Early Modern Europe

| last = Capern

| first = Amanda L.

| publisher = Taylor & Francis

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=aHm6DwAAQBAJ&pg=PT22

| date = 30 October 2019

| isbn = 978-1-00-070959-9

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Slavery in India; with an introduction by Radha Kumud Mukherjee and with a foreword by Asim Kumar Datta

| last = Chattopadhyay

| first = Amal Kumar

| year = 1959

| publisher = Nagarjun Press

| url = https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.105457/page/n165/mode/2up

| via = Internet Archive

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Domestic Violence and the Islamic Tradition

| last = Chaudhry

| first = Ayesha S.

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ZFT1AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA105

| date = 2013

| isbn = 978-0-19-166989-7

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Islam and the Abolition of Slavery

| last = Clarence-Smith

| first = William Gervase

| year = 2006

| author-link = William Gervase Clarence-Smith

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=nQbylEdqJKkC

| isbn = 9780195221510

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka

| last1 = Claus

| first1 = Peter J.

| last2 = Diamond

| first2 = Sarah

| last3 = Mills

| first3 = Margaret Ann

| year = 2003

| publisher = Taylor & Francis

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ienxrTPHzzwC&pg=PA7

| isbn = 978-0-415-93919-5

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Freedom at Midnight

| last1 = Collins

| first1 = Larry

| last2 = Lapierre

| first2 = Dominique

| author1-link = Larry Collins (writer)

| author2-link = Dominique Lapierre

| year = 1975

| publisher = Collins

| url = https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.103056/page/n359/mode/2up

| via = Internet Archive

| isbn = 978-0-00-216055-1

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = A Gendered Lens for Genocide Prevention

| last1 = Connellan

| first1 = Mary Michele

| last2 = Fröhlich

| first2 = Christiane

| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan UK

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=WB4xDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA142

| date = 15 August 2017

| isbn = 978-1-137-60117-9

}}

  • {{cite book|last1=Cortese|first1=D.|last2=Calderini|first2=S.|date=2006|title=Women and the Fatimids in the World of slam|publisher=Edinburgh University Press|isbn=9780748626298}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia |last=Cortese |first=Delia |editor=Natana J. DeLong-Bas |title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Women |entry=Concubinage |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2013}}
  • {{cite book

| title = Wartime Sexual Violence: From Silence to Condemnation of a Weapon of War

| last = Crawford

| first = Kerry F.

| year = 2017

| publisher = Georgetown University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=rUowDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA13

| isbn = 978-1-62616-466-6

}}

  • {{cite book |last1=Cuno |first1=Kenneth M. |title=Modernizing marriage: family, ideology, and law in nineteenth and early twentieth century Egypt |date=2015 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |location=Syracuse (N. Y.) |isbn=9780815633921}}
  • {{cite book

| title = Nationbuilding, Gender and War Crimes in South Asia

| last = D'Costa

| first = Bina

| year = 2010

| author-link = Bina D'Costa

| publisher = Routledge

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ivzKjY5LncIC&pg=PA102

| isbn = 978-041556566-0

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The Armenian Genocide Legacy

| last = Demirdjian

| first = Alexis

| author-link = Alexis Demirdjian

| publisher = Springer

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1L3tCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA125

| date = 4 April 2016

| isbn = 978-1-137-56163-3

}}

  • {{cite journal | title = Prosecuting ISIS for the sexual slavery of the Yazidi women and girls

| last = El-Masri | first = Samar

| journal = The International Journal of Human Rights

| year = 2018 | volume = 22 | issue = 8 | pages = 1047–1066

| doi = 10.1080/13642987.2018.1495195

| s2cid = 149935720 | quote = Regardless of ISIS's interpretation of certain Quranic verses to justify their explicit practice of sexual slavery – which was publicly refuted by dozens of Islamic scholars – and regardless of the social, cultural and religious reasons that may clarify ISIS's disregard of girls' and women's rights, the victims deserve justice.

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Slavery in the Ottoman Empire and its Demise 1800-1909

| last = Erdem

| first = Y.

| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan UK

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=dyZ-DAAAQBAJ&pg=PA52

| date = 20 November 1996

| isbn = 978-0-230-37297-9

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The Life of Muhammad: Al-Waqidi's Kitab Al-Maghazi

| last = Faizer

| first = Rizwi

| publisher = Routledge

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gZknAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA462

| date = 5 September 2013

| isbn = 978-1-136-92114-8

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The Ottoman and Mughal Empires: Social History in the Early Modern World

| last = Faroqhi

| first = Suraiya

| author-link = Suraiya Faroqhi

| publisher = Bloomsbury Publishing

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=DvalDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA244

| date = 8 August 2019

| isbn = 978-1-78831-873-0

}}

  • {{cite news

| title = Boko Haram: Kidnappers, Slave-Owners, Terrorists, Killers

| last = Ferran

| first = Lee

| publisher = ABC News

| url = https://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/boko-haram-kidnappers-slave-owners-terrorists-killers/story?id=23598347

| url-status = live

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20181104104804/https://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/boko-haram-kidnappers-slave-owners-terrorists-killers/story?id=23598347

| date = 5 May 2014

| access-date = 28 June 2020

| archive-date = 4 November 2018

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Gender, Mastery and Slavery: From European to Atlantic World Frontiers

| last = Foster

| first = William Henry

| publisher = Macmillan International Higher Education

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=aaAcBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA57

| date = 18 December 2009

| isbn = 978-0-230-31358-3

}}{{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

  • {{cite book| title = Tolerance and Coercion in Islam: Interfaith Relations in the Muslim Tradition

| last = Friedmann | first = Yohanan | year = 2003

| author-link = Yohanan Friedmann

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = History of Sikh Gurus Retold: 1469-1606 C.E

| last = Gandhi

| first = Surjit Singh

| year = 2007

| publisher = Atlantic Publishers & Dist

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=qw7-kUkHA_0C&pg=PA19

| isbn = 978-81-269-0857-8

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Extremely Violent Societies: Mass Violence in the Twentieth-Century World

| last = Gerlach

| first = Christian

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=48N-XbOltMEC&pg=PA155

| date = 14 October 2010

| pages = 155–

| isbn = 978-1-139-49351-2

}}

  • {{cite book |last=Gibbon |first=Edward |author-link=Edward Gibbon |year=1994 |title=The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire |title-link=The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire |chapter=Fall in the East |orig-date=1781 |editor=David Womersley |publisher=Penguin |isbn=978-0140433937 |chapter-url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/gibbon/decline/files/volume2/chap46.htm#Heraclius }}
  • {{cite journal | title = Some Observations on Infanticide in Medieval Muslim Society

| last = Giladi | first = Avner

| journal = International Journal of Middle East Studies

| year = 1990 | volume = 22 | issue = 2 | pages = 185–200

| doi = 10.1017/S0020743800033377

| s2cid = 144324973 }}

  • {{cite book

| title = Slavery in Early Christianity

| last = Glancy

| first = Jennifer A.

| year = 2002

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=8Xc8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA144

| isbn = 978-0-195-13609-8

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Violence in Islamic Thought from the Qur'an to the Mongols

| last = Gleave

| first = Robert

| publisher = Edinburgh University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ZD0kDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA171

| date = 14 April 2015

| isbn = 978-0-7486-9424-2

}}

  • {{cite book |editor-first1=Matthew S. |editor-last1=Gordon |editor-first2=Kathryn A. |editor-last2=Hain |title=Concubines and Courtesans: Women and slavery in Islamic history |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2017}}
  • {{cite book

| title = The Sikhs of the Punjab

| last = Grewal

| first = J. S.

| author-link = J. S. Grewal

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| url = https://archive.org/details/sikhsofpunjab0000grew

| url-access = registration

| via = Internet Archive

| date = 8 October 1998

| page = [https://archive.org/details/sikhsofpunjab0000grew/page/n74 11]

| isbn = 978-0-521-63764-0

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Forgotten Atrocities: Memoirs of a Survivor of the 1947 Partition of India

| last = Gupta

| first = Bal K.

| year = 2012

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=N2BIAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA33

| pages = 33–34

| publisher = Lulu.com

| isbn = 978-1-257-91419-7

}}

  • {{cite book

| chapter = Epilogue: Avenues to Social Mobility Available to Courtesans and Concubines

| last = Hain

| first = Kathryn A.

| year = 2017

| title = Concubines and Courtesans: Women and Slavery in Islamic History

| editor1-last = Gordon

| editor1-first = Matthew S.

| editor2-last = Hain

| editor2-first = Kathryn A.

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ysQ2DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA328

| pages = 324–339

| isbn = 978-0-190-62219-0

}}

  • {{cite book| chapter = Slaves in Name Only: Free Women as Royal Concubines in Late Timurid Iran and Central Asia

| last = Hamid | first = Usman | year = 2017

| title = Concubines and Courtesans: Women and Slavery in Islamic History

| editor1-last = Gordon | editor1-first = Matthew S.

| editor2-last = Hain | editor2-first = Kathryn A.

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| pages = 190–206

| isbn = 978-0-190-62219-0

}}

  • {{cite book| title = The Muslims of British India

| last = Hardy | first = Peter | year = 1972

| author-link = Peter Hardy (historian)

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Kashmīr Under the Sultāns

| last = Hasan

| first = Mohibbul

| year = 2005

| author-link = Mohibbul Hasan

| publisher = Aakar Books

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=EUlwmXjE9DQC&pg=PA244

| isbn = 978-81-87879-49-7

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Beyond Slavery: Overcoming Its Religious and Sexual Legacies

| last = Hazelton

| first = Jacqueline L.

| publisher = Springer

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=NaVhAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT3

| date = 25 October 2010

| isbn = 978-0-230-11389-3

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The [European] Other in Medieval Arabic Literature and Culture: Ninth-Twelfth Century AD

| last = Hermes

| first = N.

| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan US

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=FU1rAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT234

| date = 9 April 2012

| page = 234

| isbn = 978-1-137-08165-0

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Religious Traditions in Modern South Asia

| last1 = Hirst

| first1 = Jacqueline Suthren

| last2 = Zavos

| first2 = John

| author1-link = Jacqueline Suthren Hirst

| publisher = Routledge

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=bBOpAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA152

| date = March 2013

| isbn = 978-1-136-62668-5

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Crusading and Masculinities

| last1 = Hodgson

| first1 = Natasha R.

| last2 = Lewis

| first2 = Katherine J.

| last3 = Mesley

| first3 = Matthew M.

| publisher = Taylor & Francis

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=tOOLDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT111

| date = 5 March 2019

| pages = 111–

| isbn = 978-1-351-68014-1

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The World of the Crusades: A Daily Life Encyclopedia [2 volumes]

| last = Holt

| first = Andrew

| publisher = ABC-CLIO

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=O8ubDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA755

| date = 5 June 2019

| isbn = 978-1-4408-5462-0

}}

  • {{cite journal | title = Sex and the Shaheed: Insights from the Life Sciences on Islamic Suicide Terrorism

| last1 = Hudson | first1 = Valerie M.

| last2 = Thayer | first2 = Bradley

| author1-link = Valerie M. Hudson

| journal = International Security

| year = 2010 | volume = 34 | issue = 4 | pages = 48–53

| jstor = 40784561

}}

  • {{Cite book

| title = Usd al-Ghaba

| last = Ibn al-Athir

| first = Ali

| year = 1998

| publisher = Dar al-Fikr

| location = Beirut

| url = https://al-maktaba.org/book/23700/3194

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The Expeditions: An Early Biography of Muhammad

| last = Ibn Rashid

| first = Ma'mar

| author-link = Ma'mar ibn Rashid

| publisher = NYU Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=N8mlCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA68

| date = 15 October 2015

| isbn = 978-1-4798-0047-6

}}

  • {{cite book| title = Doubt in Islamic Law

| last = Intisar | first = Rabb

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| page = 152

| quote = Put together these verses indicate that the master-slave relationship creates a status through which sexual relations may become licit, provided both parties consent.

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = The New Cambridge History of Islam: Volume 4, Islamic Cultures and Societies to the End of the Eighteenth Century

| last = Irwin

| first = Robert

| author-link = Robert Irwin (writer)

| publisher = Cambridge University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=bNeaBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT531

| date = 4 November 2010

| isbn = 978-1-316-18431-8

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = National Trials of International Crimes in Bangladesh: Transitional Justice as Reflected in Judgments

| last = Islam

| first = M. Rafiqul

| publisher = Brill / Nijhof

| location = Leiden; Boston

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=V8KODwAAQBAJ&pg=PA177

| date = 19 March 2019

| isbn = 978-90-04-38938-0

}}

  • {{cite journal | title = Islam's Black Slaves: The Other Black Diaspora by Ronald Segal- Book Review

| journal = The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education

| year = 2001 | number = 31

| ref = {{sfnRef|Islam's Black Slaves|2001}}

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = War and Slavery in Sudan

| last = Jok

| first = Jok Madut

| publisher = University of Pennsylvania Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=wqzvlWdxThwC

| date = 3 August 2010

| isbn = 978-0-8122-0058-4

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Woman in Islām: A Manual with Special Reference to Conditions in India

| last1 = Jones

| first1 = Violet Rhoda

| last2 = Jones

| first2 = Lewis Bevan

| year = 1981

| publisher = Hyperion Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=nlDaAAAAMAAJ

| isbn = 978-0-8305-0107-6

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Innovation in Islam: Traditions and Contributions

| last = Kamrava

| first = Mehran

| publisher = University of California Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=06gwDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA193

| date = 18 April 2011

| isbn = 978-0-520-26695-7

}}

  • {{cite encyclopedia |editor-first1=Kate |editor-last1=Fleet |editor-first2=Gudrun |editor-last2=Krämer |editor-first3=Denis |editor-last3=Matringe |editor-first4=John |editor-last4=Nawas |editor-first5=Everett |editor-last5=Rowson |title=Encyclopaedia of Islam |volume=3 |date=1986|entry=Concubinage in Islamic law |first1=Marion H. |last1=Katz}}
  • {{cite book

| title = The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan

| last = Khan

| first = Yasmin

| year = 2007

| author-link = Yasmin Khan

| publisher = Yale University Press

| url = https://archive.org/details/greatpartitionma00khan

| url-access = registration

| via = Internet Archive

| page = [https://archive.org/details/greatpartitionma00khan/page/n180 135]

| isbn = 978-0-300-12078-3

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire

| last = Kia

| first = Mehrdad

| year = 2011

| publisher = ABC-CLIO

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=byETWDb0ekEC&pg=PA199

| isbn = 978-0-313-33692-8

}}

  • {{cite book

| title = Martyrdom, Self-sacrifice, and Self-immolation: Religious Perspectives on Suicide

| last = Kitts

| first = Margo

| year = 2018

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=XHhUDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA143

| isbn = 978-0-19-065648-5

}}

  • {{cite encyclopedia|last=Klein|first=Martin A. |author-link=Martin A. Klein |title=Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition|date=2014|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=9780810875289}}
  • {{cite book

| title = Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World

| last = Lal

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{{refend}}

Category:Concubinage

Category:Groups practising sexual slavery

Category:Sexual slavery

Category:Slave concubines

Category:History of slavery

Category:Violence against women

Category:Wartime sexual violence

Category:Sexuality in the Middle East

concubinage in the Muslim world

Category:Islam and women

Category:Islam and slavery

Category:History of slavery in the Muslim world

Category:Sexuality in Islam