Editorial Summary
This hub follows how religious authority became social practice: law, scholars, judges, mosques, endowments, taxation, conversion, intermarriage, and spiritual life. It keeps doctrine, administration, and lived reality distinct.
How to Use This Hub
Start with Maliki law and the ulama, then move to mosques, endowments, taxes, conversion, and Sufism. Use institution pages to ask who had authority, how rules were enforced, and where evidence is legal rather than social.
Core Frame
This topic follows institutions: law, judges, scholars, mosques, endowments, taxes, and religious authority.
Choose a Route
Start With Authority
See how legal interpretation, scholars, judges, and rulers shaped public life.
Follow Institutions
Use these pages to connect mosques, endowments, taxation, and state finance.
Read Boundaries and Practice
Move from doctrine into conversion, intermarriage, spiritual life, and lived religious boundaries.
Reader Cautions
Legal ideals and lived practice are not identical, so the article separates rules, enforcement, and social reality.
Questions This Hub Answers
- Which legal tradition is in view?
- Who had authority?
- What can be shown from documents rather than assumed from doctrine?
Best Next Steps
Read across at least two routes before making a claim about religious life. A legal rule, a political decree, and a community's lived practice may point in different directions.
Editorial Position
Moor History Center treats institutions as evidence of power and practice, not as proof that society always matched its formal ideals.
