
New Books in Islamic Studies Adam Bursi, "Traces of the Prophets: Relics and Sacred Spaces in Early Islam" (Edinburgh UP, 2024)
Jan 26, 2026
Adam Bursi, scholar of early Islamic history and author of Traces of the Prophets, discusses relics, tombs, and sacred spaces in eighth–ninth century sources. He maps debates over prophetic traces, contested hadiths about tomb mosques, stories of hidden or stolen relics, and tactile practices like rubbing and perfuming holy objects. The conversation traces how early material devotion shaped later shrine cultures.
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Search Widely In Textual Archives
- Search across genres and chapters when researching early Islamic practices because references scatter widely.
- Use digital search methods and compare hadith recensions to locate dispersed relic-related reports.
Relics Were Native To Early Islam
- Early Muslims practiced relic and tomb veneration alongside rhetoric condemning it.
- Adam Bursi argues these practices were native to Islamic tradition from the start, not later imports.
Tension Between Rhetoric And Practice
- A hadith about expelling Jews and Christians for building mosques over tombs frames an anti-shrine rhetoric.
- Yet archaeology and texts show Muslims nonetheless built or incorporated tomb-adjacent mosques and relic sites.

