KANUN


Meaning of KANUN in English

(from Greek kanon, rule), Arabic Qanun, the tabulation of administrative regulations in the Ottoman Empire that supplemented the Shari'ah (Islamic law) and the discretionary authority of the sultan. In Islamic judicial theory there was no law other than the Shari'ah. In the early Islamic states, however, practical concessions had to be made to custom, to the exigencies of time and place, and to the will of the ruler and applied in separate administrative courts. Under the Ottomans, who devised an elaborate administrative system, the distinctions disappeared between the Shari'ah and administrative law codified as kanuns and kanunnames (collection of kanuns). In theory, kanuns were to harmonize with the prescription of the Shari'ah, giving the ulama (men of religious learning) the right to invalidate any regulation that contradicted Islamic law. In practice, however, the ulama, organized in a hierarchy under the authority of the sultan, rarely repudiated his kanuns, thus giving the sultan freedom to legislate. The first kanunnames were issued under Sultan Mehmed II (reigned 144446, 145181), though his predecessors had promulgated individual kanuns. The kanuns of Selim I (reigned 151220) and Sleyman I (reigned 152066), called Kanuni (Law Giver), were known for their political wisdom.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.