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Theme Changer

 Topic: Qur'anic studies today

 (Read 1493001 times)
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  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #930 - August 10, 2016, 09:51 AM

    Quote
    Alba Fedeli - Working on Early Qur'anic Manuscripts: Reading and Editing Their Texts

    https://soundcloud.com/cirucberkeley/working-on-early-quranic-manuscripts-reading-and-editing-their-texts-alba-fedeli-040716

    I've just listened to this right though and it's definitely worthwhile if you have any interest in the Birmingham Qur'an or other early manuscripts.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #931 - August 10, 2016, 08:28 PM

    Arabian Epigraphic Notes - open access online journal edited by Al-Jallad

    http://arabianepigraphicnotes.org

    https://mobile.twitter.com/AENJournal
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #932 - August 11, 2016, 12:59 AM

    That blog that AEN Twitter links to is outrageously interesting in its analysis of Quranic Arabic.  Starting with:

    http://phoenixblog.typepad.com/blog/page/3/

    And going through:

    http://phoenixblog.typepad.com/blog/page/2/

    http://phoenixblog.typepad.com/

    The author starts by explaining "This strongly suggests to me that the Qurʔān was composed in a language that was quite far removed from the form it is recited in today, and probably more closely reflects the orthography that it is written in.  In the coming weeks, I wish to discuss some of the unusual spellings and forms in the Qurʔānic Consonantal Text (QCT), which seem to point to linguistic facts of the Qurʔānic language which do not agree with its traditional reading, or the later codified Classical Arabic."

    Then he marches through post after post going into the most interesting examples of this.  Amazingly I've never seen any single source try to do this before from a broad perspective, even though people commonly say it; I hope that Al Jallad will finally get to it someday, but until then, this blog is fantastic reading.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #933 - August 13, 2016, 07:17 PM

    Ian David Morris on Aisha's age at marriage:

    https://mobile.twitter.com/iandavidmorris/status/764455352289136640

    https://mobile.twitter.com/iandavidmorris/status/764510828515254272
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #934 - August 17, 2016, 09:11 PM

    A couple of talks by Guillaume Dye for any French speakers:

    La Sourate Maryam du coran inspirée par la liturgie chrétienne du Kathisma en Palestine
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?list=PLrxfWBuFyjdU0NZ80JgQiGc7iGi_sZeR-&v=pzHcMGGRRMo
    Alexandre le Grand l'idolâtre, selon le coran prophète Dhul Qarnayn le Bi-cornu
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?list=PLrxfWBuFyjdU0NZ80JgQiGc7iGi_sZeR-&params=OAFIAVgC&v=lmveT3HU7x8&mode=NORMAL
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #935 - August 19, 2016, 10:07 AM

    In the first video, he says very quickly that the syriac christians could say that Jesus was a prophet. I'm afraid he's totally wrong here.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #936 - August 19, 2016, 04:19 PM

    Hi Altara, welcome to the forum.

    To be honest my French isn't very good and certainly not up to following academic lectures. I've posted the videos up on the basis that the articles I've read by Dye in English have been worth reading, but I couldn't really give an opinion on his line of argument here.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #937 - August 19, 2016, 05:12 PM

    Robert Hoyland's talk, 'the birth of Arabic writing on stone', is now on youtube. Skip to 3:30 for the start.
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PkxZfpUqtCk
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #938 - August 19, 2016, 05:49 PM

    Comments above note the dating system often doesn't refer to anything - "in the year 55".

    Is another possibility that this is an accounting tradition?

    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #939 - August 19, 2016, 06:02 PM

    For example, 76 year cycles from astronomy?

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callippic_cycle



    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism

    Quote
    In 2014, a study by Carman and Evans argued for a new dating of approximately 200 BC.[14][15] Moreover, according to Carman and Evans, the Babylonian arithmetic style of prediction fits much better with the device's predictive models than the traditional Greek trigonometric style.[14]



    Quote
    Many of the smaller fragments that have been found contain nothing of apparent value, however, a few have some inscriptions on them. Fragment 19 contains significant back door inscriptions including one reading "...76 years...." which refers to the Callippic cycle. Other inscriptions seem to describe the function of the back dials. In addition to this important minor fragment, 15 further minor fragments have remnants of inscriptions on them.[31]:7





    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #940 - August 19, 2016, 06:40 PM

    Peter Webb - extract from the introduction to 'Imagining the Arabs: Arab Identity and the Rise of Islam'

    https://www.academia.edu/25496690/Imagining_the_Arabs_Arab_Identity_and_the_Rise_of_Islam
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #941 - August 19, 2016, 07:37 PM

    Thank you. Dye is of course a great scholar. The recording is not so good, and I've the impression that he says that to support his thesis about a post conquest Christian scribal writing of Q 19, 1-33.



    Hi Altara, welcome to the forum.

    To be honest my French isn't very good and certainly not up to following academic lectures. I've posted the videos up on the basis that the articles I've read by Dye in English have been worth reading, but I couldn't really give an opinion on his line of argument here.


  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #942 - August 20, 2016, 07:36 AM

    Ian David Morris gets poetic about studies of early Islam: https://mobile.twitter.com/iandavidmorris/status/766418323747770368
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #943 - August 20, 2016, 09:59 AM

    Some comments by Morris from a discussion below this blogpost: http://www.iandavidmorris.com/misspelling-muhammad-why-robert-spencer-is-wrong-about-thomas-presbyter/
    Quote
    ....
    Moving on. The basic problem in early Islamic history isn’t that Muslim testimony is always and everywhere unreliable – though all testimony is tendentious. The problem is that we rely too much on very late sources, and too little on earlier sources. Hoyland’s right that non-Muslims shared space with ‘Muslims’ (or however we should call them) in the seventh century, so they must have been in conversation. That’s good news for “us historians”, surely: it dissolves the false categories of ‘insider’ and ‘outsider’ and offers hope that our earliest sources might not be too distant from the events they describe.

    ....
    It’s true that we know little about the ‘Muslims’ of the seventh century, so the ways that they constructed and interpreted their collective history are obscure to us. And yet we do have (near-)contemporaneous sources that agree on important ‘facts’ with later sources. One of those ‘facts’ is that there was a leader of the Arabs called Muhammad. He was glossed by pseudo-Sebeos as a militant preacher, and arguably by the Doctrina Iacobi as a militant prophet. These, taken together with later epigraphic and numismatic sources and even later literary sources, can be best – most parsimoniously – read as attesting the existence of a religio-political leader of the early Arab conquests. What he meant, and what exactly he did where and how, are all contestable, but I haven’t seen a compelling challenge to Muhammad’s existence tout court.

    Hoyland’s article “Writing the Biography of the Prophet Muhammad” is a helpful overview, if I remember correctly.

    ....
    I don’t see how Bar Penkaye implies a bloodless conquest. I also don’t see why non-Arabic sources should invoke the word jihad specifically, though some of them do interpret the Arabs as fighting for a religious cause. It’s notable that many of our early sources call the Arabs muhajirun, ’emigrants’, cohering nicely with those archaic Arabic traditions that praise the twin duties of migration and jihad. Now, whether the word jihad was used at the time isn’t obvious – though I think it was –; but it’s reasonable to infer that a culture of militant colonialism did prevail in the seventh century, coded in a monotheistic idiom.

    Carbon dating isn’t as reliable as you’re making out. Alba Fedeli gave a brilliant paper to a conference recently, insisting that – when done well, which it often isn’t – carbon dating should be applied alongside other kinds of evidence; she also criticised scholars and journalists for broadcasting preliminary results as though they were solid facts – because #science. (Hopefully that paper will be published in the proceedings.) It’s generally understood that our earliest fragments date to around ‘Abd al-Malik’s reign. François Déroche’s book, Qur’ans of the Umayyads, is useful on this topic.

    Basic questions – who compiled the qur’anic texts, where to situate specific passages within Late Antique literature, how the corpus connects to Muhammad – are still unknown. I would like to react to that word ‘anterior’, though. While the qur’anic texts clearly do draw on older materials (how could they not?), they refashion these materials in interesting ways. In any case, they apparently represent a community or communities familiar with (para)biblical (oral?) literature, composing and redacting in Arabic, presumably during the seventh century: these texts can be located roughly in the broad sweep of history. And they do mention Muhammad, which isn’t nothing. But I’m fairly agnostic on how to interpret the Qur’an.

    If you demand eyewitness testimony for historical figures, very well. Your history is then a vacuum haunted by empty discourses. You and I have nothing meaningful to discuss: I can’t follow you down that epistemological rabbit hole.

    I have to stand up for the Arabic historical tradition here. It’s deeply flawed. It bears the marks of a long transmission, with excessive narrativisation and rationalisation. Yet it was not invented from nothing. It remembers people and tribes with a surprising degree of accuracy, coherent with numismatic, epigraphic and non-Arabic evidence. Political history is possible. In order to do away with Muhammad entirely, we’d have to undo the entire tradition. That’s neither proportionate nor parsimonious.

    ....
    Book 15 of Bar Penkaye describes the “sons of Hagar” as invaders whose “delight was in shedding blood without reason, and its pleasure laying hands on everything. Its passion was raiding and stealing, and its food hatred and anger; it was never appeased by offerings made to it. When it had prospered…, it had taken possession of all the kingdoms of the earth, had subjected brutally all the peoples and brought their sons and daughters into a bitter slavery, … and the blood of the martyrs of Christ shed…” etc.

    The shorter statement at the end of Book 14 – “not with any war or battle” – exaggerates to convey the ease with which the Arabs seized territory: “How, otherwise, could naked men, riding without armour or shield, have been able to win, apart from divine aid[?]”, he asks. It’s a rhetorical question, as is the almost immediate counterpoint, “Who can relate the carnage they effected[?]”. This is an interesting literary device, so thanks for drawing my attention to it, but it’s not to be understood literally.

    On the Nessana papyri, I agree with Rachel Stroumsa’s comments in her doctoral dissertation (pp. 6-7):

    “‘A people without a history’ – so [C.J.] Kraemer [a modern editor] calls the inhabitants of Nessana, with more than a touch of disparagement (or even contempt). By that, Kraemer means that the papyri do not reflect or comment upon the great movements of armies and the change of the political map of the Levant and the Mediterranean in the seventh century. … This attitude is a corollary of the focus on great men and grand movements which dominated history in general and Classics in particular in the 1950’s. With the changes introduced by the French Medievalists of the so-called New History school, the emphasis changed to a focus on society as the proper subject of historical research, rather than events. This new focus obviously lent itself well to the wealth of documentary evidence pouring out of Egypt… Thus what to Kraemer and his contemporaries was a liability – namely, the internal, micro-historical nature of the Nessana documents – can be seen as an asset. Since the inhabitants of Nessana were not members of the higher echelons of Palestinian society – in contradistinction to the wealthy and more sophisticated burghers seen in the papyri of Petra – they give us a chance to glimpse lives which are often unknown, and to examine the importance attached to different allegiances and groupings in circles that did not fall under elite or highly literate influence.”

    We shouldn’t expect local administrative documents to tell us about battles: that’s not what they’re for.

    The problem of archaeological evidence deserves a real conversation, which I’m not able to have right now. It’s enough to make three points. First, the Middle East is a difficult region in which to excavate, so we’ve rather little to go on. Second, archaeologists have tended to privilege Roman layers, destroying Islamic layers in the process, so even those sites that have been excavated have turned up less than we might have hoped. And third, the Arabs – unlike the Sasanians in the early seventh century – had little strategic interest in the sort of military and urban activity that might have left a rich archaeological legacy. They took slaves and booty, but then it was more profitable to extract taxes than to raze cities; as mobile garrisons they settled in tented communities (a fustat is a tent!), but only slowly developed these into permanent cities.

    I meant to imply that doctrines were among the materials reshaped in the process of composition and recension that produced the Qur’an. I’m not a specialist on the Qur’an, but I’ve never seen colleagues suggest that the qur’anic texts can be placed before 543. Have you? I suspect many of the intertexts we’ve identified are most comfortably situated in the seventh century.

    Jeremy Johns argues that early professions of ‘Islamic’ religiosity were sponsored by the imperial state, which had only come to fruition under ‘Abd al-Malik; Robert Hoyland responds that an imperial state with the requisite resources did already exist, but simply had “no pressing need to proclaim publicly the tenets of their belief. ‘Abd al-Malik did so because he was fighting to hold the polity together, trying to rally the Muslim community behind him and to find a rationale for their continued existence together in the face of a debilitating civil war”. Either of these, or another explanation entirely, may explain the shortage of Arabic references to Muhammad. Pastoralist raiders don’t keep diaries. The argument from silence would be thin even if there were silence, which there isn’t: Muhammad is attested already by the mid-seventh century.

    I’ve already explained that your impossible standard for evidence is one that effectively dissolves all of history into collective myth. Your answer was to restate your original position, with some Greek thrown in. I was not impressed: τὸ δὶς ἐξαμαρτεῖν οὐκ ἀνδρὸς σοφοῦ. I won’t be answering any more assertions along that vein.

    You’ve not listened carefully to what Déroche says in that video (for which, thanks). He says we can date Qur’anic fragments from the third quarter of the seventh century, and he dismisses those numbers you’ve given for Sanaa – “c’est pas possible” – because he knows that carbon dating is often spurious, and that we should integrate its results with other kinds of evidence. He considers the Sanaa fragments to be Umayyad, which is why he treats them in Qur’ans of the Umayyads: “the problem may lie with the conditions (arid or semi-arid climate) under which the cattle, the hides of which were later turned into parchment, was raised. … I would therefore suggest on the basis of the various points I enumerated that the Codex Ṣanʿāʾ I was written during the second half of the first/seventh century and erased at the earliest by the middle of the following century.”

    I’ve explained that carbon dating is iffy, and I’ve advised you to read what Déroche has to say on that matter in Qur’ans of the Umayyads. This right here is me underlining those points in the hope that you’ll seriously think about them.

    Follow the link for links within the text (and the other side of the argument).

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #944 - August 20, 2016, 10:27 AM

    Here's the dissertation on the Nessana papyri referred to by Morris. The idea of Arabic speaking villagers who don't appear to have identified as 'Arabs' seems to me to fit in with Peter Webb's arguments for linking the origins of an explicitly Arab identity to the post-conquest society and the rise of Islam.

    Rachel Stroumsa - People and Identities in Nessana

    http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/10161/619/D_Stroumsa_Rachel_a_200805.pdf%3Fsequence%3D1
    Quote
    In this dissertation I draw on the Nessana papyri corpus and relevant comparable material (including papyri from Petra and Aphrodito and inscriptions from the region) to argue that ethnic, linguistic and imperial identities were not significant for the self-definition of the residents of Nessana in particular, and Palaestina Tertia in general, in the sixth to the seventh centuries AD. In contrast, this dissertation argues that economic considerations and local identities played an important role in people’s perceptions of themselves and in the delineations of different social groups.

    The first chapter is intended to provide a basis for further discussion by setting out the known networks of class and economics. The second chapter begins the examination of ethnicity, which is continued in the third chapter; but the second chapter concentrates on external definitions applied to the people of Nessana, and in particular on the difference between the attitude of the Byzantine Empire to the village and the attitude of the Umayyad Empire. Building on this ground, the third chapter tackles the issue of ethnicity to determine whether it was at all operative in Nessana, – that though ethnonyms were applied in various cases, these served more as markers of outsiders and were situational.

    Chapter four moves to the question of language use and linguistic identity, examining the linguistic divisions – the papyri. An examination of the evidence for Arabic interference within the Greek leads to the conclusion that Arabic was the vernacular, and that Greek was used both before and after the Muslim conquest for its connotations of power and imperial rule rather than as a marker of self identity. The conclusions reached in this chapter reprise the discussion of imperial identity and the questions of centralization first raised in chapter two. This return to previous threads continues in chapter five, which deals with the ties between Nessana and neighboring communities and local identities. The chapter concludes that the local village identity was indeed very strong and possibly the most relevant and frequently used form of self-identification. Overall, it appears that many of the categories we use in the modern world are not relevant in Nessana, and that in those cases where they are used, the usage implies something slightly different.

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #945 - August 20, 2016, 05:44 PM

    A short video from Michael Macdonald on ancient Arabian inscriptions.
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wLCuF1ULXuM
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #946 - August 20, 2016, 10:41 PM

    David Bertaina reviews Michael Penn's Envisioning Islam

    http://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/christian-muslim-mosaic-accommodation-partition-david-bertaina/
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #947 - August 21, 2016, 08:37 AM

    Scott Savran - The al-Qadisiyya Embassies: Cultural Polemics at Work in Early Islamic Historiography

    https://www.academia.edu/8054564/The_al-Qadisiyya_Embassies_Cultural_Polemics_at_Work_in_Early_Islamic_Historiography

    Scott Savran - Cultural Polemics in the Early Islamic World: The Shu'ubiyya Controversy

    https://www.academia.edu/8054584/Cultural_Polemics_in_the_Early_Islamic_World_The_Shuubiyya_Controversy

    Scott Savran - So Who Were the Shu'ubis Anyway? Constructing Identity in the Early 'Abbasid Caliphate

    https://www.academia.edu/12444473/So_Who_Were_the_Shuubis_Anyway_Constructing_Identity_in_the_Early_Abbasid_Caliphate

    Scott Savran - Bahram V Gur: The "Arab" Sasanian King

    https://www.academia.edu/8064158/Bahram_V_Gur_The_Arab_Sasanian_King

    Scott Savran reviews Milka Levy-Rubin's Non-Muslims in the Early Islamic Empire

    https://www.academia.edu/8119212/M._Levy-Rubin_Non-Muslims_in_the_Early_Islamic_Empire_From_Surrender_to_Coexistence_Cambridge_Cambridge_University_Press_2011_
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #948 - August 21, 2016, 10:55 AM

    Scott Savran - The Early Islamic Mawali Reconsidered (review of dissertation by Elizabeth Urban)

    http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/7103

    Elizabeth Urban - The Identity Crisis of Abu Bakra: Mawla of the Prophet, or Polemical Tool

    http://www.academia.edu/23458851/THE_IDENTITY_CRISIS_OF_ABŪ_BAKRA_MAWLĀ_OF_THE_PROPHET_OR_POLEMICAL_TOOL
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #949 - August 21, 2016, 11:19 AM

    Elizabeth Urban - The Identity Crisis of Abu Bakra: Mawla of the Prophet, or Polemical Tool

    http://www.academia.edu/23458851/THE_IDENTITY_CRISIS_OF_ABŪ_BAKRA_MAWLĀ_OF_THE_PROPHET_OR_POLEMICAL_TOOL

       is that whole book or excerpts of that book dear zeca??

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #950 - August 21, 2016, 11:23 AM

    ^It's a paper adapted from part of her dissertation (see Scott Savran's review).
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #951 - August 21, 2016, 04:19 PM

    Peter Webb - extract from the introduction to 'Imagining the Arabs: Arab Identity and the Rise of Islam'

    https://www.academia.edu/25496690/Imagining_the_Arabs_Arab_Identity_and_the_Rise_of_Islam

    Here's an alternative view of the origins of Arab identity from Michael Macdonald, though to me Peter Webb's take on it - as essentially a post-conquest development - seems clearer and more realistic.

    Arabs, Arabias and Arabic before Late Antiquity

    http://www.academia.edu/4592796/Arabs_Arabias_and_Arabic_before_Late_Antiquity
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #952 - August 21, 2016, 06:03 PM

    Sarah Bowen Savant - "Persians" in Early Islam

    http://www.academia.edu/17783202/_Persians_in_Early_Islam

    Samad Alavi reviews Sarah Bowen Savant's The New Muslims of Post-Conquest Iran

    http://www.academia.edu/19808443/Review_of_Sarah_Bowen_Savants_The_New_Muslims_of_Post-Conquest_Iran_Tradition_Memory_Identity
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #953 - August 22, 2016, 09:35 AM

    PDF download of "My Ordeal with the Qur'an"

    http://sabercathost.com/2iEE/MyOrdealwiththeQuranPDFenglishtranslation1.pdf
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #954 - August 22, 2016, 10:06 AM

    The Qurʾān between Judaism and Christianity - lectures organised by Holger Zellentin at the University of Nottingham

    https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-quran-between-judaism-and-christianity-lecture-1-saturday-17-sept-registration-27194295871
    Quote
    The Qurʾān between Judaism and Christianity
    A series of public lectures funded by the British Academy
    Hosted at the University of Nottingham
    Co-sponsored by the Karimia Institute

    This series seeks to enhance the public understanding of the Qurʾān by focusing on the ways in which the Scripture of Islam relates to Judaism and to Christianity. On three days in autumn 2016, prominent and emerging academics from the UK, from mainland Europe, and from overseas will address how the Qurʾān relates to aspects of the two other “Abrahamic” traditions, ranging from Biblical narrative to theology and law. The talks will be followed by a response and a discussion. Attendance is free and open to the public, but registration is mandatory.

    ---
    Lecture 1 – Saturday 17 September, 1-6pm, Room A1, Highfield House, University Park
    Welcome: Dr Holger Zellentin, The University of Nottingham
    How to Study the Qurʾān – ‘Traditional’ and ‘Academic’ Approaches
    Speakers: Prof Islam Dayeh, Free University, Berlin; Prof Mehdi Azaiez, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Response by Dr Marianna Klar, School of Oriental and African Studies.
    The Qurʾān and the Bible
    Speakers: Prof Angelika Neuwirth, Free University, Berlin; Prof Gabriel Said Reynolds, Notre Dame University. Response by Dr Samer Rashwani, University of Tübingen.

    Lecture 2 – Sunday 16 October, 1-6pm, Room A48, Sir Clive Granger Building, University Park
    Welcome: Dr Musharraf Hussain, OBE, DL, Karimia Institute
    The lecture series: Dr Holger Zellentin, The University of Nottingham
    The Qurʾān’s Arabian Background
    Speakers: Prof Devin Stewart, Emory University; Dr Nora K Schmid, Free University of Berlin. Response by Dr Asma Hilali, Ismaili Institute, London.
    The Qurʾān and Christianity
    Speakers: Dr Nicolai Sinai, University of Oxford; Prof Emran El-Badawi, University of Houston. Response by Dr Jon Hoover, The University of Nottingham.

    Lecture 3 – Sunday 4 December, 1-6pm, Room A48, Sir Clive Granger Building, University Park
    Welcome: Dr Jon Hoover, The University of Nottingham
    The Qurʾān and Judaism
    Speakers: Dirk Hartwig, Free University, Berlin; Prof Walid Saleh, University of Toronto. Response by Dr Harith bin Ramli, Cambridge Muslim College.
    Qurʾānic Law: from the Bible to the 21st Century
    Speakers: Dr Holger Zellentin, The University of Nottingham; Prof Lena Salaymeh, University of Tel Aviv. Response by Dr Shuruq Naguib, University of Lancaster.

    More details: Quran.Lectures@nottingham.ac.uk

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #955 - August 22, 2016, 07:26 PM

    Thank you to post the dissertation of Rachel Stroumsa which is a must read in the field. There is the dissertation of Peter Webb somewhere freely available  as well which is a must read too.
    On the other hand it is interesting to note that it is the Quran, and only him, who resurrects the word "arab" which is a biblical word (that curiously P.Webb forget to say...) which named the _ancient_ population of the peninsula whereas the contemporary greek and latin accounts went for "sarakenoi/eni".
    Therefore the Quran plays here in the field of the universe of the Biblical Revelation. He takes a buried name and rename with it the population to which it is addressed.

    Here's the dissertation on the Nessana papyri referred to by Morris. The idea of Arabic speaking villagers who don't appear to have identified as 'Arabs' seems to me to fit in with Peter Webb's arguments for linking the origins of an explicitly Arab identity to the post-conquest society and the rise of Islam.

    Rachel Stroumsa - People and Identities in Nessana

    http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/10161/619/D_Stroumsa_Rachel_a_200805.pdf%3Fsequence%3D1

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #956 - August 22, 2016, 07:59 PM

    Peter Webb's dissertation again:

    Creating Arab Origins: Muslim Constructions of al-Jāhiliyya and Arab History

    http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/18551/1/Webb_3618.pdf
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #957 - August 25, 2016, 10:35 PM

    David Kiltz - The relationship between Arabic Allāh and Syriac Allāhā

    http://www.academia.edu/2076696/The_relationship_between_Arabic_Allāh_and_Syriac_Allāhā
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #958 - August 26, 2016, 08:56 AM

    Laila Nehmé - A glimpse of the development of the Nabataean script into Arabic based on old and new epigraphic material

    http://www.academia.edu/2106858/_A_glimpse_of_the_development_of_the_Nabataean_script_into_Arabic_based_on_old_and_new_epigraphic_material_in_M.C.A._Macdonald_ed_The_development_of_Arabic_as_a_written_language_Supplement_to_the_Proceedings_of_the_Seminar_for_Arabian_Studies_40_._Oxford_47-88
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #959 - August 26, 2016, 09:25 AM

    The earliest documentary evidence for the hajj apparently, from the early eighth century.

    Petra Sijpesteijn - An Early Umayyad Papyrus Invitation for the Ḥajj

    https://www.academia.edu/10389264/An_Early_Umayyad_Papyrus_Invitation_for_the_Ḥajj
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