Shurṭa
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''Shurṭa'' ( ar, شرطة) is the common Arabic term for police, although its precise meaning is that of a "picked" or elite force. Bodies termed ''shurṭa'' were established in the early days of the Caliphate, perhaps as early as the caliphate of Uthman (644–656). In the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, the ''shurṭa'' had considerable power, and its head, the ''ṣāḥib al-shurṭa'' ( ar, صاحب الشرطة), was an important official, whether at the provincial level or in the central government. The duties of the ''shurṭa'' varied with time and place: it was primarily a police and internal security force and also had judicial functions, but it could also be entrusted with suppressing brigandage, enforcing the '' ḥisbah'', customs and tax duties, rubbish collection, acting as a bodyguard for governors, etc. In the Abbasid East, the chief of police also supervised the prison system. From the 10th century, the importance of the ''shurṭa'' declined, along with the power of the central government: the army—now dominated by foreign military castes ('' ghilmān'' or '' mamālīk'')—assumed the internal security role, while the cities regained a measure of self-government and appropriated the more local tasks of the ''shurṭa'' such as that of the
night watch Night Watch or Nightwatch may refer to: Books * ''The Night Watch'', a 1977 memoir by Central Intelligence Agency officer David Atlee Phillips Novels * ''Night Watch'', a 1972 novel by American screenwriter Lucille Fletcher * ''Night Watch'', a 1 ...
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See also

* Qadi * Mazalim


References


Sources

* {{EI2 , volume=9 , title=S̲h̲urṭa , first = J.S. , last = Nielsen , page = 510 , url = http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_1065 History of Islam History of law enforcement Government of the Abbasid Caliphate Government of the Umayyad Caliphate Arabic words and phrases