,
Muhammad al-Tahir ibn Ashur and Mohamed Abdelaziz Djaït (
Al-Zaytuna Mosque, 1957) In 1919, Hussein returned to Egypt with Suzanne, and he was appointed professor of history at
Cairo University. He also served as president of the academy. Taha Hussein was a member of several scientific academies in Egypt and internationally. He was also the founding
Rector of the
University of Alexandria. A work of literary criticism,
On Pre-Islamic Poetry (), published in 1926, brought him fame and some notoriety in the Arab world. In this book, Hussein expressed doubt about the authenticity of much early Arabic poetry, claiming it to have been falsified during ancient times due to tribal pride and inter-tribal rivalries. He also hinted indirectly that the
Qur'an should not be taken as an objective source of history. Consequently, the book aroused the intense anger and hostility of religious scholars at
Al Azhar as well as other traditionalists, and he was accused of having insulted Islam. The public prosecutor stated, however, that what Taha Hussein had said was the opinion of an academic researcher; no legal action was taken against him, although he lost his post at
Cairo University in 1931. His book was banned but was re-published the next year with slight modifications under the title
On Pre-Islamic Literature (1927). ==Political career==