
New Books Network Adam Bursi, "Traces of the Prophets: Relics and Sacred Spaces in Early Islam" (Edinburgh UP, 2024)
Jan 26, 2026
Adam Bursi, scholarly author and editorial assistant, discusses his book on relics and sacred spaces in early Islam. He traces debates over prophetic tombs, relics like Maqam Ibrahim, and texts that shape presence and absence. Short scenes explore hadiths about tombs, hidden holy bodies, and how tactile practices made places sacred.
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Relics Were Part Of Early Islam
- Early Muslims engaged with relic and tomb veneration from the beginning, not only as 'popular' practice.
- Relic debates shaped Muslim identity in conversation with Jewish and Christian practices.
Contradictory Hadiths Vs. Material Evidence
- A hadith about expelling Jews and Christians for building mosques on prophets' tombs became a key rhetorical tool.
- Despite that hadith, literary and archaeological evidence shows Muslims often incorporated tombs and relics into sacred architecture.
Theft Of The Maqam Ibrahim
- Adam recounts the story of Jirjus (George) who stole the Maqam Ibrahim and was killed for it.
- He links this tale to a wider genre of relic-theft stories in late antique Christianity.

