Source in the Spotlight
Co-production through Comparison: Muslims and Christians in Ibn Jubayr’s Rihla
Christianity, Islam, and Judaism are shaped and co-produced through mutual observation, imitation, and differentiation. For some authors, comparison with other religions serves to underline the reciprocal differences and to emphasize, in this way, a particular religion’s own uniqueness. Ibn Jubayr’s Rihla exemplifies this discourse: he compares how Christians and Muslims look and act as a way of emphasizing those elements that distinguish his own group – thus echoing an ancient and “shared” polemical tradition.
Event: Open Zoom Seminar
Open Seminar with Marianne Moyaert (Leuven)
Event: Open Zoom Seminar
Open Seminar with Dina el-Omari (Münster)
About
Who we are
The project is coordinated by Katharina Heyden, Professor for Ancient History of Christianity and Interreligious Encounters at the University of Bern (Switzerland), and David Nirenberg, Leon Levy Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton (U.S.), and includes a network of collaborators across North America, Europe, and the Middle East.
New Case Study
The Older, the Better: Forging a Neo-Pagan Tradition in Co-Production with Christianity and Islam
The Laurentian library in Florence holds many medieval copies of writings of the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, most of them still dangling the long chains which once bound them to the wooden desks of Michaelangelo’s library in San Lorenzo. One manuscript, copied in 1318, looks at first glance like just another late-Byzantine copy of Herodotus’s classic work. But a century or so after its creation an eccentric philosopher, George Gemistos, better known as “Pletho”, went through the manuscript carefully editing, deleting, or rewriting selected passages. His alterations bring Herodotus into line with a new history of philosophy which Gemistos wrote as part of his clandestine revival of ancient Greek Paganism. Like so many of Gemistos’s “ancient” novelties, this looks like one side of a competitive dialogue with the monotheistic religions of his day. The Florentine manuscript illustrates how the dynamics of co-production, visible within Judaism, Christianity and Islam, could also spill over their borders into the more esoteric movements of the late medieval world.