RT Book T1 Muslims and the making of modern Europe A1 Greble, Emily 1978- LA English PP New York PB Oxford University Press YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1762263262 AB "Muslims have lived in Europe for hundreds of years. Only in 1878, however, did many of them become formal citizens of European states. Muslims and the Making of Europe shows how this massive shift in citizenship rights transformed both Muslims' daily lives and European laws and societies. Starting with the Treaty of Berlin and ending with the eradication of the Shari'a legal system in Communist Yugoslavia, this book centers Muslim voices and perspectives in an analysis of the twists and turns of nineteenth and twentieth century European history, from early nation-building projects to the shattering of the European imperial order after World War I, through the interwar political experiments of liberal democracy and authoritarianism, and into the Second World War, when Muslims, like other Europeans, were caught between occupation and civil conflict, and the ideological programs of fascism and communism. Its focus moves from "Ottoman Europe" in the late nineteenth century to Yugoslavia, a multi-confessional, multi-lingual state founded after World War I. Throughout these decades, Muslims negotiated with state authorities over the boundaries of Islamic law, the nature of religious freedom, and the meaning of minority rights. As they did so, Muslims helped to shape emergent political, social, and legal projects in Europe"-- NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 321-335 CN D1056.2.M87 SN 9780197538807 K1 Muslims : Europe : History : 20th century K1 Muslims : Europe : History : 19th century K1 Muslims : Legal status, laws, etc : Europe K1 Muslims : Civil rights : Europe K1 Freedom Of Religion : Europe : History K1 Religion And Politics : Europe : History