Institution of collective surety (kefalet) in the Ottoman legal theory and practice during the transitional period
Author(s) - 
Ognjen Krešić, 
Miroslav Pavlović
Publication year - 2020
Publication title - 
zbornik matice srpske za drustvene nauke
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2406-0836
pISSN - 0352-5732
DOI - 10.2298/zmsdn2074167k
Subject(s) - surety , institution , law , political science
Institution of surety is an integral component of the Islamic legal   tradition. Sharia law recognizes two types of surety, or kef?let: for a   person and for material property. Collective surety gradually developed as a   part of the administrative and judicial practice in the Ottoman Empire. The   application of collective surety as means for establishing and warranting   the security in the provinces is known in the historiography. In the paper,   examples of a different legal practice are researched - collective   suretyship predominantly concerning the financial transactions. Ottoman   sources produced in the provinces and by the central administrative   institutions were analysed. We examined cases dating mostly from the 18th   century, connected with the sancak of Semendire, the ey?let of Bosnia, and   other Ottoman provinces in Europe. Special attention was given to the   connection between the institution of collective suretyship and mercantile   enterprises. The collective suretyship in front of the sharia courts and in   the cases of joint appellations testifies to the increasing importance of   local communities and reflects their transformations and the ways of their   representation in front of the local and central authorities. These changes   often led to the establishment of local communities? territorial   jurisdictions, and they were greatly influenced by the Ottoman taxation   policies. Through ever closer and more complex association and grouping   (based on confession, territory, or financial interests), the non-Muslim   population succeeded to successfully counter local structures of power and   to gain access to important capital flows.
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