Source in the Spotlight
The Co-Production of Early Islam in the Maronite Chronicle
A short Syriac Christian world chronicle, written around the year 665 AD, takes on new significance as a unique witness to the co-production of earliest Islam. Its details reveal a fascinating transitional period in which Arab caliphs could pray at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and Mary’s tomb, adjudicate inter-Christian theological disputes, and mint coins with crosses for their majority-Christian subjects. These details have turned the so-called Maronite Chronicle, which would otherwise be deeply obscure, into a priceless resource for historians of earliest Islam, and have even led to its use in online Christian polemics against Islam.
Event: Open Zoom Seminar
Open Seminar with Ronny Vollandt (München): The Qaraite dār al-ʿilm in 11th Century Jerusalem and how to reconstruct its teaching context
Sept. 23, 2024 9:30-11am EST / 3:30-5pm CET zoom
Learn moreEvent: International Conference
Conference: Co-produced Rituals between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam: Uncovering a Common Late Antique and Early Medieval Religious Culture
April 2–3, 2025 Bern, Switzerland
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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, Director and 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
Genealogizing Deviance: George of Trebizond on the Islamo-Platonic Conspiracy of Gemistos Pletho
According to his enemies, the Byzantine philosopher Georgios Gemistos Pletho (ca. 1360–1454) was an apostate who broke away from Christianity and, with a shadowy group of followers, began worshipping the pagan gods of ancient Greece. Gemistos’s Neopagan sect was claimed to be a co-production of the most pernicious kind, whose doctrinal origins went back to Elissaeus, a Jewish apostate alleged to have been Gemistos’s teacher, or to Mohammed, the prophet of Islam, to a nameless Christian heretic from Alexandria, to Epicurus, and, ultimately, to the diabolical philosopher Plato. In this essay I focus on one of Gemistos’s enemies – George of Trebizond (aka Trapezuntius) – to show how he drew on Christian heresiology and fears of Islamic conquest to create a new and monstrous vision of Gemistos. Together, Trapezuntius and others forged a remarkable co-production from the ideas of diverse and competing religious groups: Gemistos Pletho became a Jewish-trained “second Mohammed” and “fourth Plato” whose doctrines were poised to destroy Christianity.