Earliest Christian Views of Islam

Similar documents
Inter-religious relations: Judaism, Christianity and Islam, 7.5ECTS

3. Who was the founding prophet of Islam? a. d) Muhammad b. c) Abraham c. a) Ali d. b) Abu Bakr

The Arab Empire and Its Successors Chapter 6, Section 2 Creation of an Arab Empire

Chapter 4: The Spread of Islam

10. What was the early attitude of Islam toward Jews and Christians?

Introduction to Christian-Muslim Relations in Early Islam

The Crusades. Summary. Contents. Rob Waring. Level Before Reading Think Ahead During Reading Comprehension... 5

NELC Narratives of Islamic Origins

The Worlds of European Christendom. Chapter 9

The Umayyad Dynasty. Brett Coffman Liberty High School AP World History

One thousand years ago the nations and peoples of Europe,

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Islamic World. Standard: Trace the origins and expansion of the Islamic World between 600 CE and 1300 CE.

Within your table groups, discuss why is it that we cannot talk about the medieval Middle east (Arabian Peninsula) without discussing religion.

A prophet has appeared Coming with the Saracens : The non-islamic testimonies on the

Byzantium And The Crusades

Chapter 10. Byzantine & Muslim Civilizations

THE ARAB EMPIRE. AP World History Notes Chapter 11

Muhammad Through Western Eyes. Liyakat Takim McMaster University

What is Islam? Second largest religion in the world. 1.2 Billion Muslims (20% of earth population) Based on beliefs on Jews & Christians

The Rise of Islam In the seventh century, a new faith took hold in the Middle East. The followers of Islam, Muslims, believe that Allah (God) transmit

ISLAMIC CIVILIZATIONS A.D.

Rise and Spread of Islam

The Crusades. Footsteps of Faith. Windstar Cruises Ross Arnold, Fall 2013

Muslim Civilizations

Office Hours are Tuesdays 1:15-2:30. If you cannot come at that time, please me to set up an appointment.

HISTORY 119: SYLLABUS THE CRUSADES AND THE NEAR EAST,

Patterns of Cross-Cultural Tolerance and Intolerance in Medieval Christian Depictions of Islam, Muslims, and Mohammad

Arabian Peninsula Most Arabs settled Bedouin Nomads minority --Caravan trade: Yemen to Mesopotamia and Mediterranean

University of Oregon, Department of History, HIST 410/510. Spring 2014, TTh, 2:00 3:20 PM, 185 Lillis Hall

History of Christianity as a World Religion 1A (20) U00512

2/12/2012. Emperor Leo III (r ) Events leading up to Iconoclasm. originally from Syria. nickname Saracen-minded strategos of Anatolian Theme

Mk AD

CHAPTER 12 - THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES IN THE WEST TO 1000: THE BIRTH OF EUROPE

Section 2. Objectives

The Byzantine Empire. By History.com, adapted by Newsela staff on Word Count 1,009 Level 1060L

Islam AN AGE OF ACCELERATING CONNECTIONS ( )

7 th Grade History. Chapter 1: The Tools of History. What are latitude and longitude? Hemispheres? (know equator and prime meridian)

b. a) Turkey Incorrect. The answer is c. Christianity was the majority religion in Egypt by the time of the conquest.

Prester John: The Legend And Its Sources (Crusade Texts In Translation) By Keagan Brewer READ ONLINE

NOTEBOOK 1. RETAKE OF GEOGRAPHY AND HISTORY 2ESO STUDENT: GROUP:

The Arabian Peninsula and Surrounding Lands

CHAPTER NINE Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe

Civilization in Eastern Europe. Byzantium and Orthodox Europe

Kyle Smith. +1 (416)

Byzantine Empire ( )

Performance Task Causation: Spread of Knowledge

2/8/2012. Byzantines and Islamic Civilization. Lecture 7 Rise of Islam

Byzantine Empire Map Webquest. Internet Emergency Edition

Unit 3 pt. 3 The Worlds of Christendom:the Byzantine Empire. Write down what is in red. 1 Copyright 2013 by Bedford/St. Martin s

I. The Rise of Islam. A. Arabs come from the Arabian Peninsula. Most early Arabs were polytheistic. They recognized a god named Allah and other gods.

TENTATIVE/ SAMPLE Course Syllabus

4. What was the primary international trade route during the Classical period?

Read Chapters from your textbook. Answer the following short answer and multiple choice questions based on the readings in the space provided.

How the Crusades Changed History

RISE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE

Holy Land: The Rise of Three Faiths

Rightly Guided Caliphs 1

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

Bentley Chapter 16 Study Guide: The Two Worlds of Christendom

Arabia before Muhammad

THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA. The Arabic Letters of the Byzantine Emperor Leo III to the Caliph Umar Ibn Abd al- Aziz:

Early Christian Interpretation of the Qur ān

Fasting A person must eat only one meal a day, after sunset, every day during the holy month of

Content. Section 1: The Beginnings

The Foundation of the Modern World

The Northern Crusades

The Arabian Peninsula. Farming limited in Arabia Commerce lively Mecca, near Red Sea, most important of coastal towns

Name: Date: Period: Chapter 9 Reading Guide. D. What major area has been lost by 1000 CE, other than Italy?

7/8 World History. Week 20. Byzantine Empire & Islam

Chapter 10: The Muslim World,

Introduction to Islam. Wonders of Arabia Windstar Cruises Ross Arnold, Fall 2014

Phone: (use !) Dunbar 3205 Hours: TR , homepages.wmich.edu/~rberkhof/courses/his443/

History of Christianity I (to AD 843)

The Worlds of Christendom: Contraction, Expansion, and Division

Big Idea The Ottoman Empire Expands. Essential Question How did the Ottomans expand their empire?

The Thin. Line. A Lecture Series on the History of the Modern University

The Islamic Empire absorbed several cultures and dominated trade between Asia and the Mediterranean sea.

Expansion. Many clan fought each other. Clans were unified under Islam. Began military attacks against neighboring people

The Rise of Islam. Muhammad changes the world

Big Idea Suleiman the Magnificent rules during a Golden Age. Essential Question How did Suleiman the Magnificent gain and maintain power?

THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE POST-CLASSICAL PERIOD (P. 108) 1. What did the end of the classical era and the end of the post-classical era have in common?

Chapter 13. The Commonwealth of Byzantium. Copyright 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display.

Text 5: The Crusades. Topic 7: Medieval Christian Europe ( ) Lesson 4: Economic Expansion and Change: The Crusades and After

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

STUDY PLAN Ph.d in history (Thesis Track) Plan Number 2014

Which lead most to the spread of Islam: innovation, trade, or conflict?

LG 1: Explain how Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy were unifying social and political forces in Western Europe and Byzantine Europe and

When Christians First Met Muslims

FOUNDATIONAL COURSE 2: RULERS AND RELIGION--TEXT AND CONTEXT

Unit Three. The Middle East and Asia in the Medieval Age

Chapter 10: Judaism and Christianity! Introduction!

The rise of the Islamic Empire

introduction To part 1: historical overview

Islam The Spread of Islam

CAS RN 410/ HI 410/ GRS RN 710/ STH TX 871 Religion, Community, and Culture in Medieval Spain

A Brief History of Catholicism (Excerpts from Catholicism for Dummies)

The Middle Ages: Continued

DBQ 4: Spread of Islam

HRS 126/HIST 126 (GE Area C4) FALL 2010 DR. NYSTROM 2 SECTIONS IN ARC 1011 (M 6-8:50) 2 ONLINE SECTIONS

Transcription:

Earliest Christian Views of Islam PO HIST 119 KB Wolf Description Over the course of the century following Muhammad's death in 632, Muslim armies dominated the eastern, southern, and western shores of the Mediterranean, areas that had been in Christian hands for centuries. How Christian commentators came to terms with this dramatic religio-political transformation of their world is the subject of this seminar. Primary sources from the hands of contemporary Greek, Syriac, Arabic, Armenian, and Latin Christian authors will be supplemented by the works of modern scholars. Units & Readings Introduction: Texts in Search of Context. 1. Background: The Christian Roman Empire and its Enemies: Internal and External Jenkins, Jesus Wars, vii-xv, 41-68, 131-265. Howard-Johnston, "The Official History of Heraclius' Persian Campaigns," pp. 57-85. 2. Background: Islam Donner, Muhammad and the Believers at the origins of Islam, xixiv, 1-144, 194-224. Crone, "Among the Believers" (2010)--review article. Ruthven, "The Birth of Islam: A Different View," New York Review of Books (2011)--review article. Morony, "Religious Communities in Sasanian and Early Muslim Iraq," pp. 113-135. 3. Bits and Pieces: The Earliest Eastern Christian References to the Arab Conquests Anonymous Syriac gospel notes (637) Sophronius of Jerusalem (634-637) Doctrina Jacobi nuper baptizati (634-640) Anonymous Continuator of John Moschus (shortly after 637)

Maximus the Confessor (634-40) Thomas the Priest, Chronicle (640) A Nestorian of Khuzistan (660s/670s) Donner, "Visions of the Early Islamic Expansion: Between the Heroic and the Horrific," pp. 9-29. 4. The Apocalyptic Response Daniel 7 Sebeos, The Armenian History, (after 661), chapters 42-52, pp. xi-lii, 94-154. John Bar Penkaye, Rish Melle, Book 15 (687) Pseudo-Methodius, Apocalypse (692): o Alexander, "The Syriac Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius," pp. 13-51 (actual text on pp. 36-51). o Alexander, "The Medieval Legend of the Last Roman o Emperor," pp. 1-14. Reinink, "Pseudo-Methodius: A Concept of History in Response to the Rise of Islam," pp. 149-187. The Gospel of the Twelve Apostles (c. 705) o Drijvers, "The Gospel of the Twelve Apostles," pp. 189-213. 5. The Arab Conquests in the Christian Chronicles of the East The Chronicle of Theophanes (c. 815), pp. vii-xx, 1-141. 6. Apologetics and Polemics: Early efforts Griffith, "Anastasios of Sinai, the Hodegos, and the Muslims," pp. 341-358. John of Damascus, De Haeresibus 101 (743), pp. 133-141. Sahas, John of Damascus on Islam, pp. 3-95. On the Triune Nature of God (755 or 788), pp. 2-36. 7. The Dialogues The Correspondence between Umar II and Leo III (719?) Timothy I's Response to Al-Mahdi (780), pp. 1-41. Risalat al-kindi (830?) Griffith, "Christian Theology in Arabic," pp. 45-74. 8. Theodore Abu Qurrah and the Appeal to Reason Griffith, "Faith and Reason in Christian Kalam: Theodore Abu Qurrah on Discerning the True Religion," pp. 1-43.

Theodore Abu Qurrah, Discerning the True Religion (c. 785), pp. 1-57. 9. Bahira and Counterhistory The Legend of Sergius-Bahira: The East-Syrian Recension (9C), pp. 255-309 (alt. pages) The Legend of Sergius-Bahira: The Long Arabic Recension (9C), pp. 435-527 (alt. pages) Griffith, "Muhammad and the Monk Bahira: Relections on a Syriac and Arabic text from Early Abbasid Times," pp. 146-174. 10. A glance at the Latin West Wolf, "Counterhistory in the Earliest Latin Lives of Muhammad." Wolf, Christian Martyrs in Muslim Spain. Additional units pertaining to the East 11. The Hagiography of Christian Martyrs to Islam Passion of the Sixty Martyrs of Gaza (638), pp. 1-6. Theophanes' accounts of Eustathios (d. c. 740) and Peter of Maiouma (aka, Peter of Capitolias, d. c. 742), pp. 105, 107-108. Passion of Anthony Ruwah (799), pp.1-5. Griffith, "The Arabic Account of 'Abd al-masih an-nagrani al-ghassani" (d. 860?), pp. 331-374. The Earliest Lives of Muhammad in Context Toldoth Yeshu Apochrypal Acts of St. Peter Additional Secondary Bibliography: Averil Cameron, ed., Byzantium before the Rise of Islam, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 1 (Ashgate). Shaul Shaked, ed., The Sasanian East before the Rise of Islam, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 2 (Ashgate). Fred Donner, ed., The Expansion of the Early Islamic State, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 5 (Ashgate). Michael Bonner, ed., Arab-Byzantine Relations in Early Islamic Times, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, v. 8 (Ashgate).

Robert Hoyland, ed., Muslims and Others in Early Islamic Society, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 18 (Ashgate, 2004). Sidney Griffith, ed., The Christian Communities in the Early Islamic World, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 19 (Ashgate). David Wasserstein, ed., The Jewish Communities of the Early Islamic World, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 20 (Ashgate). Everett Rowson, ed., The Rise of Islamic Philosophy, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 39 (Ashgate). Manuela Marín, ed., The Formation of al-andalus I, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 46 M. Fierro and J. Samsó, eds., The Formation of al-andalus II, The Formation of the Classical Islamic World, vol. 47 Additional units: Early Latin Christian Views of Islam 1. Latin Christendom on the Eve of Islam Isidore, Chronica Maiora (615 and 624) Isidore, History of the Goths, pp. 79-109. Tolan, Saracens, pp. 3-20 2. The Muslim Conquests in the Christian Chronicles of the West Chronicle of 754 (754), pp. 111-160. Chronicle of Alfonso III (880s), pp. 161-177. Tolan, pp. 78-85, 98-100. Chronica Prophetica (883) 3. The Earliest Latin Views of Islam Wolf, Christian Martyrs in Muslim Spain, pp. 1-119. Eulogius, "Martyrdom of Isaac," pp. 42-47. Paul Alvarus, Life of Eulogius (c. 859), pp. 51-55. Wolf, "The Earliest Latin Lives of Muhammad" (1990), pp. 89-101. Wolf, "Christian Views of Islam in Early Medieval Spain" (1996), pp. 85-108 4. The View from Northern Europe Fredegar, Chronicle (c. 658), selections. Southern, Western Views of Islam in the Middle Ages, pp. 1-33. Kedar, "The Early Centuries: the Muslims beyond the Bounds of European Mission and Polemics," pp. 3-41.

Tolan, Saracens, pp. 71-108. Hroswitha of Gandersheim, Passio sancti Pelagii (c. 970), pp. 128-153. John of St. Arnulph, Life of John of Görz (983), pp. 62-75. 5. The First Crusade and its Triumphant "Hangover" Peter Tudebode, Historia de Hierosolymitano Itinere (c. 1100), pp. 15-127. Tolan, Saracens, pp. 105-134. Petrus Alfonsi, Dialogue against the Jews (1110), Fifth Titulus, pp. 146-163. Halevi, "Lex Mahomethi: Carnal and Spiritual Representations of Islamic Law and Ritual in a Twelfth-Century Dialogue by a Jewish Convert to Christianity," pp. 315-338. 6. Peter the Venerable and the Latin Translation of the Qur'an Kritzeck, Peter the Venerable and Islam, pp. 3-47. Tolan, "Peter the Venerable on the 'Diabolical Heresy' of the Saracens," pp. 345-367.