Arabic-Islamic Views of the Latin West: Tracing the Emergence of Medieval Europe

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Oxford University Press, 2015 - Всего страниц: 436
Arabic-Islamic Views of the Latin West provides an insight into how the Arabic-Islamic world perceived medieval Western Europe in an age that is usually associated with the rise and expansion of Islam, the Spanish Reconquista, and the Crusades. Previous scholarship has maintained that the Arabic-Islamic world regarded Western Europe as a cultural backwater at the periphery of civilization that clung to a superseded religion. It holds mental barriers imposed by Islam responsible for the Muslim world's arrogant and ignorant attitude towards its northern neighbours. This study refutes this view by focussing on the mechanisms of transmission and reception that characterized the flow of information between both cultural spheres. By explaining how Arabic-Islamic scholars acquired and processed data on medieval Western Europe, it traces the two-fold 'emergence' of Latin-Christian Europe - a sphere that increasingly encroached upon the Mediterranean and therefore became more and more important in Arabic-Islamic scholarly literature.
 

Содержание

ArabicIslamic Records on LatinChristian Europe
1
An Evolving Information Landscape 7th15th Centuries
27
Scholars at Work
72
Discovery of the Roman West
114
The Visigoths History of a Conquered People
150
From the Franks to France
189
From the Patriarch of Rome to the Pope
231
The Expanding LatinChristian Sphere
268
A Reevaluation of ArabicIslamic Records on LatinChristian Europe
323
Bibliography
349
Index
419
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Об авторе (2015)

After studying in Washington D.C., Königswinter, Cairo, Salamanca, Bonn, and Aleppo, Daniel G. König acquired his PhD at the University of Bonn in 2006 with a thesis on the Christianisation of Western Europe. From 2007 to 2011 he worked in Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages research at the German Historical Institute in Paris where he coordinated a research group on cultural exchange in the medieval Mediterranean. From 2011 to 2014 he worked as a researcherand lecturer at the University of Frankfurt am Main. Since 2014, he has held a start-up professorship for transcultural studies within the area 'Asia and Europe in a Global Context' at the University ofHeidelberg.

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