
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies 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 who studies early Islamic material religion. He traces relics, tombs, and sacred objects across 8th–9th century texts. Short takes cover debates over prophetic traces, tensions with Jewish and Christian practices, relic theft stories, and how trees, minbars, and stones became focal points of devotion.
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Relics Were Part Of Early Islam
- Early Muslims engaged with relic and tomb veneration alongside rejecting it rhetorically.
- This practice was debated, contested, and integrated into Muslim identity from the outset.
Theft Of The Maqam Ibrahim
- Adam Bursi recounts the story of Jirgis who stole the Maqam Ibrahim and was killed when caught.
- The tale echoes late antique Christian relic-theft narratives and shows devotional motivations behind stealing relics.
Hidden Tombs Create Sacred Landscapes
- Early accounts narrate finding holy bodies like Daniel and then hiding or reburying them.
- Hiding these tombs produced a landscape of 'absent presence' that sacralized early Islamic geography.

