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 Topic: Qur'anic studies today

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  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1140 - October 13, 2016, 01:56 PM

    Forthcoming book

    Shahab Ahmed - Before Orthodoxy: The Satanic Verses in Early Islam

    http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674047426
    Quote
    One of the most controversial episodes in the life of the Prophet Muhammad concerns an incident in which he allegedly mistook words suggested by Satan as divine revelation. Known as the Satanic verses, these praises to the pagan deities contradict the Islamic belief that Allah is one and absolute. Muslims today—of all sects—deny that the incident of the Satanic verses took place. But as Shahab Ahmed explains, Muslims did not always hold this view.

    Before Orthodoxy wrestles with the question of how religions establish truth—especially religions such as Islam that lack a centralized authority to codify beliefs. Taking the now universally rejected incident of the Satanic verses as a case study in the formation of Islamic orthodoxy, Ahmed shows that early Muslims, circa 632 to 800 CE, held the exact opposite belief. For them, the Satanic verses were an established fact in the history of the Prophet. Ahmed offers a detailed account of the attitudes of Muslims to the Satanic verses in the first two centuries of Islam and traces the chains of transmission in the historical reports known as riwāyah.

    Touching directly on the nature of Muhammad’s prophetic visions, the interpretation of the Satanic verses incident is a question of profound importance in Islam, one that plays a role in defining the limits of what Muslims may legitimately say and do—issues crucial to understanding the contemporary Islamic world.


    More about Shahab Ahmed: https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2015-09-20/an-extraordinary-scholar-redefined-islam
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1141 - October 19, 2016, 04:02 PM

    "The oldest known Arabic writing found in Saudi Arabia, from ca. 470 AD belong to a Christian context..."

    http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/archaeologists-discover-earliest-known-arabic-writing-was-penned-christian-020778?nopaging=1
    Quote
    The researchers believe that the Christians choice of the early Arabic script to memorialize their comrades was an act of resistance that stood in sharp contrast to the inscriptions left by Himyarite rulers in their native Sabaean. To adopt a new writing system was a way of manifesting a separation from Himyar, and at the same time, a means to approach the rest of the Arabs to unify against their common enemy.

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1142 - October 19, 2016, 04:23 PM

    https://mobile.twitter.com/AENJournal
    Quote
    Live tweeting Qatar LeiCenSaa conference on ancient languages of Arabia and impact on Arabic #QALIA


    Conference program: http://www.academia.edu/29193589/The_Arabian_Oryx_or_Unicorn_in_Qaṭrayith_the_Ancient_East_Arabian_Language_of_Beth_Qaṭraye
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1143 - October 19, 2016, 10:49 PM

    "The oldest known Arabic writing found in Saudi Arabia, from ca. 470 AD belong to a Christian context..."

    http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/archaeologists-discover-earliest-known-arabic-writing-was-penned-christian-020778?nopaging=1


    That is really an awesomely interesting find, particularly when you consider this was about 150 years before Muhammad.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1144 - October 19, 2016, 11:21 PM

    A blog post on the same find: http://paleojudaica.blogspot.co.uk/2016_03_13_archive.html#3377447891693474798

    One question that comes to mind is whether it's really possible to say if the language of the inscription is Arabic or Nabatean Aramaic.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1145 - October 20, 2016, 12:47 AM

    Surely Arabic since, even though it's just a couple of names, in an Arabic-ish language it would be PN bn PN, x bin y, whereas Aramaic I think that would be PN br PN, a bar c?
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1146 - October 20, 2016, 03:19 AM

    The names might be Arabic and the language Aramaic. Kind of like how an Ahmed bin Sa'd moving to Scotland doesn't sign his name "Ahmed McSa'd".
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1147 - October 20, 2016, 10:12 AM

    Maybe a better question then is what language would have been used if the writer of the inscription had gone on to write something beyond a couple of names. Are there any other South Arabian Christian inscriptions, in any language, from this period? Or manuscripts for that matter.

    Edit: Interestingly Al Jallad has been tweeting today from another talk today about modern South West Arabian dialects being a result of long standing multilingualism ( https://mobile.twitter.com/AENJournal ). I wonder if this multilingualism goes back beyond the rise of Islam to the introduction of Syriac Christianity to the region, with perhaps Syriac and Arabic being present as literary languages, while the normal everyday spoken language was something else. Speculating further, could this also be true for the central Hijaz? Is there clear epigraphic or other evidence for Arabic, in some form, being used there before the spread of Christianity?
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1148 - October 20, 2016, 03:26 PM

    It is a great question you pose, but I don't know the answer.  I do know that South Arabia was monotheized at a very early juncture, such that by 350 or so paganism is practically eliminated.  I would love to know what sources there are for monotheistic ASA texts between 300-470 CE.

    If you extend the period, then you get to the point in 520 CE where the Axumites deliver a thunderous beating to South Arabia, kick out the Jewish King Dhu Nuwas, and install a puppet Christian government.  The official state inscriptions are still written in ASA script (still not Arabic), but they shift to using Ge'ez and Greek derived Christian religious terminology.  What is so interesting is that when Abraha takes over and breaks free from the Ethiopian mothership, he dramatically shifts the language of the state inscriptions, which now starts using Syriac-derived terminology.  This is around 530-50 CE.  It is pretty clear that this shift represents Abraha splitting his realm away from Ethiopia and identifying with northern forms of Arab Christianity.  The cool thing is that in doing so he evidently took a similar stance to the 470 CE inscription (although he continued to use ASA script).  There seems to have been an emerging sense of "Arab" Christianity in the peninsula, which was identified with the northern Syriac-derived Arab Christian culture (best attested in Jordan/South Syria), and hostile to Judaism/paganism/Ethiopian Christianity.  Since the Qur'an looks an awful lot like a body of Arabic religious discourse that was produced as forms of northern Syrio-Arab Christianity penetrated southwards into more peripheral Arabian regions, this strikes me as pretty significant.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1149 - October 20, 2016, 03:37 PM

    This picture of Muhammad confronting Tiamat is truly awesome.  Posted by AEN at the Qatar museum.

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvNxy7WWgAAQfRi.jpg
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1150 - October 20, 2016, 03:48 PM

    Thanks Zaotar.

    I had to look up Tiamat: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiamat
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1151 - October 20, 2016, 04:24 PM

    It may be incidental but one of the talks at the Qatar conference was by Mario Kozah on 'Qatrayith, the Ancient East Arabian language of Beth Qatraye'. This is one case where google and wikipedia don't help very much, but I wonder if part of his argument is that the language of eastern Arabia was Qatrayith rather than Arabic at the start of the Islamic period. I could be wrong about this though.

    AEN's tweets on Kozah's talk: https://mobile.twitter.com/AENJournal/status/788721526723969024
    Quote
    Kozah: pioneering scholar of Beth Qatraye, ancient east Arabia in Syriac sources #QALIA

    Kozah: all of east Arabia, including musandam peninsula and islands considered Beth Qatraye

    Kozah: leshana qatraya is separate from the language of the tayyaye

    Kozah: Qatrayit, the ancient language of east Arabia l, but what is its source? Unclear


    This summarises some of Kozah's research on 7th century Syriac Christian writers from Beth Qatraye:

    http://www.academia.edu/21546788/The_Trilogy ----- also: http://www.academia.edu/23946782/A_Lexical_and_Toponymical_Survey_of_Beth_Qatraye

    It's interesting that Syriac Christian writing actually survives from this part of Arabia, which was apparently an important centre for the (Nestorian) Church of the East.

    http://www.aub.edu.lb/communications/media/documents/may_2011/grant-syriac-en.pdf
    Quote
    Researchers in the relatively obscure field of Syriac studies have long known of the existence of at least seven Syriac writers from the 7th century AD who were born and educated in Beth Qatraye (Syriac for Qatar/Region of the Qataris) of which Isaac of Nineveh is considered to be the most influential of all Syriac monastic writers and who continues to exert a strong influence in monastic circles today. Many of the others like Dadisho‘ of Qatar, Gabriel bar Lipeh of Qatar, Abraham bar Lipeh of Qatar, Gabriel Arya of Qatar, and Ahob of Qatar – all from the 7th century – were important Syriac writers on spirituality and commentators or exegetes within the Nestorian Church of the East. These writers, who all originated in Qatar and were educated there, reveal the presence of an important center of education that rivaled the other better-known centers such as the School of Nisibis or the School of Edessa. The Syriac writers of Qatar themselves produced some of the best and most sophisticated writing to be found in all Syriac literature.

    The ascription ‘Qatraya’ (Syriac for Qatari/of Qatar) is found added to the names of all of the writers above in the ancient Syriac manuscripts from the 7th – 10th centuries AD now to be found in the British Library, Paris Bibliotheque Nationale, Vatican Library, and Selly Oak Birmingham. In addition, the name Beth Qatraye (Syriac for Land of the Qataris) was used by the Syriac speaking communities who lived there to refer to the whole region of what is now Qatar and Bahrain and the adjacent coast of Arabia. The name Beth Qatraye along with the place names of specific locations within this specific region are to be found in five letters written by Ishoyahb III, the Patriarch of the Church of the East from 650-658 AD, to the church authorities, priests, monks, and lay people of Beth Qatraye. It would seem that the Syriac community in Beth Qatraye were behaving independently of the authorities in Fars and Seleuca-Ctesiphon (in modern day Iraq) to the dismay of the Patriarch.

    According to the AUB professors, identifying scholarly communities in the Arabian peninsula that have actively shaped the production of knowledge in the 7th century across the region (including Syria and Mesopotamia) is bound to encourage scholars to rethink the ways in which the field is constructed and defined. Highlighting the contributions of the Syriac writers from Qatar will thus shape the field of Syriac studies, but also the wider field of Middle Eastern Studies. It will align the rich heritage of pre-Islamic Arabia (especially the Arabic poetic tradition) with other voices, speaking different languages and producing different knowledge, yet sharing the same or adjacent territory. This will create crossings in the cultural and historical studies of Syriac and Arabic, pre-Islamic Arabia and Byzantium. It will also highlight the peninsula's role in producing and contributing to intellectual debates at the time, showing a diversity of writings and ideas with wide ranging effects, emerging from and going back and forth between the Arabian Peninsula and the surrounding empires.

    "The importance of this project lies in its attempt to identify an educational environment and cultural movement that has been hitherto unexplored in any systematic fashion,” said one of the reviewers of the work. “Identifying Qatar as a vibrant site of cultural production in the 7th century is important because it offers new centers of learning that shift the emphasis from the traditional centers of the time, namely Syria and Mesopotamia. Isaac of Nineveh, who was thought to be from Mesopotamia, given his name, is in fact from Qatar and the product of this vibrant cultural environment. This new information will complicate the structure of "center and periphery" of learning, drawing the Arabian peninsula during that time as a key player in the cultural production beyond its borders..."


  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1152 - October 20, 2016, 05:42 PM

    Very interesting but confusing.  One of the biggest problems in Qur'anic Studies is why the original dialectal recitation of the Qur'an, which closely tracked (like its script) the Arabic language of Jordan, seems to have been forgotten and replaced with a more archaic form of Arabic, which generated what we now call 'Classical Arabic' as a sociolinguistic ideal.  Where does Classical Arabic come from anyways?  That is a big mystery.  It seems to have the features of a conservative eastern Arabic dialect, but why did that dialect become so popular and prestigious, to the point where the Qur'an itself became almost universally recited in it?

    I assume that the ancestors of Classical Arabic were lurking in the NE Arabian peninsula or southern Iraq.  So something like Qatar could have played a role in the process.  My best current guess is that the rise of Classical Arabic has some relation to the rise of Iraq/Persian 'Muhammadan' ideology, as associated with the Zubayrids, and their opposition to the Damascus caliphate.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1153 - October 20, 2016, 06:02 PM

    The first article is mainly a fairly technical archaeological report but there's some more general discussion of Christianity in the Gulf towards the end.

    R A Carter - Christianity in the Gulf during the first centuries of Islam

    http://heritage.brookes.ac.uk/downloads/abu-dhabi-collections.pdf

    Peter Hellyer - Nestorian Christianity in the Pre-Islamic UAE and Southeastern Arabia

    http://www.adias-uae.com/publications/hellyer01b.pdf
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1154 - October 20, 2016, 06:37 PM

    Very interesting but confusing.  One of the biggest problems in Qur'anic Studies is why the original dialectal recitation of the Qur'an, which closely tracked (like its script) the Arabic language of Jordan, seems to have been forgotten and replaced with a more archaic form of Arabic, which generated what we now call 'Classical Arabic' as a sociolinguistic ideal.  Where does Classical Arabic come from anyways?  That is a big mystery.  It seems to have the features of a conservative eastern Arabic dialect, but why did that dialect become so popular and prestigious, to the point where the Qur'an itself became almost universally recited in it?

    I assume that the ancestors of Classical Arabic were lurking in the NE Arabian peninsula or southern Iraq.  So something like Qatar could have played a role in the process.  My best current guess is that the rise of Classical Arabic has some relation to the rise of Iraq/Persian 'Muhammadan' ideology, as associated with the Zubayrids, and their opposition to the Damascus caliphate.

    According to the Qatar conference program the papers presented are going to be published, so maybe we'll learn more about the language of eastern Arabia from Kozah's paper. I suppose there's a more general question of where the original boundaries of the Arabic speaking linguistic area lay, and when and why Arabic spread beyond these boundaries ahead of the arrival of Islam.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1155 - October 20, 2016, 06:57 PM

    I've found the full conference program: http://media.leidenuniv.nl/legacy/south-arabian-conference.pdf

    Here's the abstract for Kozah's talk:
    Quote
    Mario Kozah (American University of Beirut)
    Title: The Arabian Oryx or Unicorn in Qaṭrayith – the Ancient East Arabian Language of Beth Qaṭraye.
    Abstract: A number of East Syriac commentaries on the Old Testament dating from the 8th and 9th centuries C.E. refer to an East Arabian language known as Qaṭrayith (Qatari) used in the region of Beth Qaṭraye (“region of the Qataris” in northeastern Arabia) in addition to citing Syriac authors from this region such as Rabban Gabriel Qaṭraya and Aḥub Qaṭraya. This paper will discuss the background, provenance and authorship of these commentaries in addition to exploring the purpose and the manner in which Qaṭrayith is used in them by considering the word for Arabian Oryx or unicorn given in this language. The significance and symbolism of this animal for the Gulf today makes this unique discovery particularly interesting and worthy of consideration with a view to deepening our broader understanding of the morphology of this ancient language from East Arabia.


    This also looks interesting:
    Quote
    Janet Watson (Leeds University) and Ali al-Mahri (Oman)
    Title: The Linguistic Tapestry of South-western Arabia
    Abstract: With the Islamic conquests, and in the centuries that followed, Arabic came into close contact with the original ancient languages of the Peninsula, leaving the language situation in the south-west of the Arabian Peninsula today as one in which dialects of Arabic exhibit, to a greater or lesser degree, linguistic features of the Ancient and Modern South Arabian languages (cf. Holes 2006). In this paper, I take phonological, morphological, lexical and syntactic data from a number of contemporary varieties spoken within northern historical Yemen – i.e. across the borders of current Yemen up into southern ˁAsīr in Saudi Arabia – and compare this with data from Ancient South Arabian and two of the Modern South Arabian languages, Mehri and Śḥerɛ̄ t. Reference where relevant will also be made to features of Ancient North Arabian and Ethio-Semitic. These comparisons show a rich linguistic tapestry, leading us to suggest that in regions which have experienced significant inter-community contact over millennia it may no longer be possible to talk about discrete sub-branches of language families.


    An article quoting Kozah on Syriac influence on Lebanese Arabic: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Lebanon-News/2008/Nov-25/53151-you-may-think-youre-speaking-lebanese-but-some-of-your-words-are-really-syriac.ashx
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1156 - October 20, 2016, 07:57 PM

    Excellent new article on the Fall of Iblis, by the always-interesting Tommaso Tesei:

    https://www.academia.edu/29305741/_The_Fall_of_Ibl%C4%ABs_and_Its_Enochic_Background._In_A._Houtman_T._Kadari_M._Poorthuis_and_V._Tohar_eds._Religious_Stories_in_Transformation_Conflict_Revision_and_Reception._Leiden_Brill_uncorrected_proofs_
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1157 - October 21, 2016, 12:02 AM

    I assume that the ancestors of Classical Arabic were lurking in the NE Arabian peninsula or southern Iraq.  So something like Qatar could have played a role in the process.  My best current guess is that the rise of Classical Arabic has some relation to the rise of Iraq/Persian 'Muhammadan' ideology, as associated with the Zubayrids, and their opposition to the Damascus caliphate.

     

    Agree on that. That's the Iraqis who have completed the rasm : Al Hira/Kufa and Basra.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1158 - October 21, 2016, 09:36 PM

    Forthcoming book (at some point)

    Jack Tannous - Simple Belief: Religion, Society, and the Making of the Medieval Middle East

    https://www.exzellenzcluster.uni-konstanz.de/5239.html?&L=1
    Quote
    I hope to complete a book on Christians and Muslims in the Late Antique and early medieval Middle East. It will seek to look at the relationship between popular and learned Christianity and to use the tension between these two to understand the spread and development of pre-Sunni Islam in the early medieval Middle East. A significant goal of the book will be to invert our understanding of minority-majority religions in the region in this period.

    The book will fall into two parts: the first will provide a description of intercommunal relations between Middle Eastern Christians both before and after the Islamic conquests. It will argue that the confessional situation was more fluid and ill-defined than scholars have recognized and that Christianity encompassed a broad spectrum of beliefs and practices that is not adequately captured by traditional divisions of the Christian community into Miaphysites, Chalcedonians, Nestorians, etc.

    The second part of the book will seek to understand how Muslim conquerors fit into this confessional landscape and will argue that traditional understandings of Middle Eastern history which treat Christians as the minority and Muslims as the majority in the region need to be reversed: we cannot properly understand Islam unless we see it as a minority religion which developed in the shadow of a non-Muslim majority.

    The religious belief of what contemporary texts refer to as ‘simple people’ will be a major focus and the book will draw on Greek, Syriac, and Arabic sources, a number of which are still in manuscript and which have been scarcely utilized by scholars of this period. It will seek to speak to Byzantinists, Islamicists, and scholars of Eastern Christianity.


    More about Jack Tannous: http://www.ou.edu/dreamcourse/past-courses/fall-2016/syrian-christianity.html
    Quote
    Dr. Tannous researches the cultural history of the eastern Mediterranean, especially the Middle East, in the Late Antique and early medieval period. His research focuses on the Syriac-speaking Christian communities of the Near East in this period, but he is also interested in a number of other, related areas, including Eastern Christian Studies more broadly, Patristics/early Christian studies, Greco-Syriac and Greco-Arabic translation, Christian-Muslim interactions, sectarianism and identity, early Islamic history, the history of the Arabic Bible, and the Quran. He has published several articles on Syriac intellectual and religious history, especially with regard to Syrian Christianity’s interaction with the Roman/Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world. He is currently finishing a major book entitled "Simple Belief: Religion, Society, and the Making of the Medieval Middle East". He co-edits (with Scott Johnson, OU Classics and Letters) the digital humanities project syri.ac, a comprehensive bibliography of Syriac Studies, which is hosted by OU.

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1159 - October 24, 2016, 04:31 PM



    Preview of Qur'an Seminar Commentary (title page/photo/contributors/25 page excerpt)

    https://www.academia.edu/29381269/Preview_of_Quran_Seminar_Commentary_title_page_photo_contributors_25_page_excerpt_De_Gruyter_November_2016

    Book launch: https://iqsaweb.wordpress.com/2016/10/03/book-launch-the-quran-seminar-commentary/
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1160 - October 24, 2016, 06:12 PM

    Hamza Zafer - Prophecy in the Quran and Early Islam
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yJj2x5y9sC0
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1161 - October 24, 2016, 11:12 PM

    Interview with Hamza Zafer: https://iqsaweb.wordpress.com/2013/02/25/rrqs/

    Hamza Zafer - On the Origin of Caliphates: http://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/on-the-origin-of-caliphates-by-hamza-m-zafer/

    Hamza Zafer - The Ummah Pericope (PhD abstract): http://www.hamzazafer.com/projects/

    Hamza Zafer - A Middle People: http://www.hamzazafer.com/a-middle-people/

    Hamza Zafer - The Matriarchs: http://www.hamzazafer.com/the-mothers-the-prophets-wives-and-wet-nurses/
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1162 - October 25, 2016, 03:20 PM

    Mention above of Ethiopia. Vaguely remembering tom Holland, what effects might Africa had have on the evolution of Arabic and Islam?

    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 #1163 - October 25, 2016, 03:29 PM

    Quote
    I do know that South Arabia was monotheized at a very early juncture, such that by 350 or so paganism is practically eliminated.   k


    That feels very early - Judaism, not Constantinian xianity? Coptic?

    Compare https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypatia



    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 #1164 - October 25, 2016, 03:37 PM

    Quote from: moi
    Mention above of Ethiopia. Vaguely remembering tom Holland, what effects might Africa had have on the evolution of Arabic and Islam?

    I'm not sure but it was part of the late antique Christian world that Islam developed from. The sixth century Ethiopian invasion of Himyar may well have helped create the context for the earliest development of what would later become Islam. Carlos Segovia argues for this.



    See this review of Bowersock's Throne of Adulis for example: https://cy.revues.org/2818?lang=en
    Quote from: Nathaniel Andrade
    By the sixth century, the imperial tensions that the Adulis Throne embodied had been exacerbated by religious differences. The Aksumite monarchs and the Ḥimyarite kings of south Arabia had converted to Christianity and Judaism respectively (Chapters 5‑7: 63‑105). In the fourth century Aezanas (‘Ezana), Aksum’s first Christian king, erected numerous commemorative inscriptions that perpetuated the rhetoric of Aksumite control over south Arabia. One of them contained texts in Greek, Ge‘ez written in an unvocalized Ethiopic script, and Ge‘ez rendered in a south Arabian Sabaic script (68‑70; figures 3‑4). The sixth‑century Aksumite king named Kālēb thereby inherited an imperial vision and religion that pitted him against the Jewish kings of Ḥimyar. These incited a particularly notable episode in pre‑Islamic Arabian and Red Sea history. Responding to a recent Aksumite expedition, a Jewish king named Yūsuf persecuted the Christians of Ḥimyar and massacred the Christian population of the city of Najrān in 523. Amid this activity, Yūsuf solicited the support of the Sasanian Persians and the Naṣrid dynasty at al‑Ḥira, but by 525 Kālēb had occupied Ḥimyar and had revitalized the Christian presence there. Kālēb also raised victory inscriptions (95 and 98‑101) in Ge‘ez at Aksum and in Ḥimyar to commemorate his two expeditions. The imperial pretensions of the Adulis Throne, raised centuries earlier, had come to fruition, but now in the name of a Christian victory over Judaism.

    The Aksumite occupation of Ḥimyar intensified diplomatic confrontation between Rome and Persia in Arabia thereafter (Chapter 8: 106‑19). Despite their doctrinal differences, the Roman emperor Justinian aligned with Aksum with the vain expectation of increasing Rome’s part in the silk trade. The diplomat Nonnosus, whose multilingual family had produced Roman ambassadors to the Red Sea and Arabia for decades prior, played a key role in this (108‑11, with Appendix 135‑43). An Aksumite dynast named Abraha ultimately asserted autonomous authority in Ḥimyar and (in 547) held a summit at Mārib that attracted Roman, Persian, and various Arab ambassadors. He also commemorated this event on an inscribed stele (112‑14). But persisting imperial and religious tensions brought the Persians, at the behest of south Arabian Jews, to intervene in the region in the early 570s. Religious conflicts continued, but no Christian or Jewish political power was left in Arabia to manage them (117‑18).

    This contentious, unstable environment provided the context in which Muḥammad founded his religious movement (Chapter 10: 120‑33). Animosities among Jews, Christians, monotheistic pagans, polytheistic pagans (as Bowersock argues), and Muḥammad’s followers in fact eventually culminated in ways that led to Muslim domination of Arabia in the 620s and of the Roman and Sasanian Near East shortly thereafter. Moreover, while once being so avid to intervene in south Arabia through their proxy allies, the mighty Roman and Persian empires virtually destroyed each other through incessant fighting just as Muḥammad’s followers were overwhelming their opponents in Arabia. In this way, Muḥammad’s career ended the era embodied by the Adulis Throne, even as it owed it a great debt.


    Shoemaker's review is more critical (first page only viewable unfortunately): https://muse.jhu.edu/article/546847
    Quote
    This brief book offers a lively introduction to the early history of Ethiopia and its relations with South Arabia. In it Bowersock opens up for readers the world of ancient East Africa primarily through the careful exegesis of two inscriptions that once were found on a now lost monument, the throne of Adulis, for which the book is titled. Our knowledge of this ancient structure comes entirely from the famous sixth-century traveler and geographer, Cosmas Indicopleustes, who saw the monument in the city of Adulis on the coast of the Red Sea sometime around 525 c.e. Cosmas had been tasked with making a transcription of these Greek inscriptions for the Ethiopian king in Axum, and apparently he kept a copy for himself, which he then included in his Christian Topography.

    Bowersock’s decision to focus on this pair of vanished inscriptions may initially seem a bit odd, particularly since so many other inscriptions from the region do survive. Nevertheless, this is partly explained by the fact that this book was commissioned for a series on emblematic objects or events, but also by the fact that one of the inscriptions in question “is undoubtedly the earliest of all known Axumite royal inscriptions” (45). Moreover, the nature of the object itself, with inscriptions from two different periods and its description during a third period, enables it to serve as an emblem of ancient Ethiopia in three distinct periods: the Hellenistic period, the early Roman Empire, and late antiquity.

    Accordingly, the object affords Bowersock an opportunity to survey the history of Ethiopia in antiquity from the Ptolemies to the rise of Islam through the interpretation of its inscriptions and Cosmas’s account. Yet in this respect the book is seemingly a bit mistitled, at least in its subtitle: “Red Sea Wars on the Eve of Islam.” Only about twenty-five pages at the end of the book concern the wars of the sixth century and the rise of Islam, with the remainder largely focused on earlier events. One imagines that “the Eve of Islam” may have been added to increase sales, and readers interested specifically in the conflicts in South Arabia during the sixth century as a backdrop for the beginnings of Islam should probably look instead to another recent (and even more brief) publication by Bowersock, Empires in Collision in Late Antiquity (Brandeis University Press, 2012).

    The book begins with a description of the throne itself, at least as reported by Cosmas, who is then himself the focus of the following chapter. The third chapter [End Page 307] focuses on the Hellenistic inscription, which is placed in the broader context of Ptolemy III’s rule and dated between 246–44 b.c.e. This early inscription, it is worth noting, was found not on the throne itself but on a stele that stood immediately behind it. The next chapter considers the throne’s inscription, which Bowersock dates to the late second or early third century. It preserves a record of imperial conquest in East Africa and beyond that Bowersock correlates with other roughly contemporary inscriptions from the region. Bowersock then turns in the subsequent chapters to the topic of Ethiopia’s conversion to Christianity and the intriguing role that Judaism played in the cultures of South Arabia during late antiquity. The final three chapters cover respectively the bloody conflict between Jews and Christians in South Arabia during the early sixth century; the involvement of the Romans and Persians in this regional conflict; and the rise of Islam in the early seventh.

    I found least successful those chapters to which the subtitle draws the reader’s focus: the final chapters in which Bowersock attempts to build connections with the beginnings of Islam. Bowersock seems to have more confidence in the accuracy of the early Islamic historical sources than I believe is warranted (see e.g. 159 n.15). Moreover, his criticisms of proposals by Hawting and Crone that the “pagans” of the Qur’an were in fact monotheists who also prayed...


    Segovia's review (in Spanish): http://www.revistadelibros.com/articulos/del-simulacro-al-laberintolos-origenes-del-coran
    Quote
    Bowersock muestra de manera pormenorizada y convincente que la imagen de la Arabia politeísta descrita en las fuentes islámicas no se sostiene y que, hacia mediados del siglo VI, la confrontación entre el cristianismo impulsado por Axum y Bizancio, por un lado, y el judaísmo respaldado por el reino de Himyar bajo los auspicios del imperio sasánida, por otro, llegó a su cenit, lo que no sólo no impidió, sino que propició una aparente reforma político-religiosa guiada por el deseo de alcanzar una síntesis. Hay, por tanto, que resituar el posterior surgimiento del islam en ese fascinante contexto histórico, al que las hostilidades bizantino-sasánidas imprimieron un nuevo perfil a lo largo del siglo VII y durante el cual las relaciones políticas y culturales de la Península Arábiga con Palestina, Siria, Mesopotamia y el sudoeste de Persia se intensificaron. El nombre de Bowersock se une así al de otros estudiosos cuyos trabajos han contribuido, desde diferentes ángulos y con diferentes resultados, a renovar las coordenadas de la investigación académica sobre los orígenes del islam al margen de la información, mezcla de invención, recuerdo selectivo y olvido –características de toda literatura en la que la consolidación del presente depende de la creación del pasado, como nos recuerda Judith Lieu en otro ámbito– consignada en las fuentes islámicas.

  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1165 - October 25, 2016, 08:08 PM

    Monotheism:

    How was the Zoroastrianism of the Sasanians viewed? We speak here of Judaism and Christianity, but surely Zoroastrianism must have been present too in these regions so disputed by Persians and Romans? Was Zoroastrianism viewed as purely monotheistic? Would they (or certain sects) not have been candidates to be considered as pagan?
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1166 - October 25, 2016, 09:44 PM

    ^This may be relevant, but probably isn't that early: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=nI98DAAAQBAJ&pg=PA189&lpg=PA189&dq=andrew+magnusson+zoroastrianism&source=bl&ots=WOvh6lKDm9&sig=1FyJGz4pGntc1ZTNYy00COvo0CU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi1tK_T9fbPAhVKFMAKHUeLCVgQ6AEIMTAG#v=onepage&q=andrew%20magnusson%20zoroastrianism&f=false
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1167 - October 26, 2016, 12:04 AM

    A favorite quote from my favorite scholar on Zoroastrianism:

    “Today I find the discussion about whether Mazdaism is polytheistic, monotheistic, or dualistic both simplistic and not critical enough, and I find these grand, but summary, classifications meaningless in the scholarly discourse and, at any rate, completely inadequate for explaining the Mazdean pantheon.”  J. Kellens, Essays on Zarathustra and Zoroastrianism, tr. P. Skjærvø (Costa Mesa 2000): xiv.

    That said, I doubt there was significant Zoroastrian practice anywhere in the Arabian peninsula.  The Persian conquest of Yemen in 570 wasn't pervasive enough to establish it.  I don't think the Sasanians ever had much luck exporting Zoroastrianism to the huge areas that they conquered.  They really needed a much better branding and marketing approach.  I am trying to help with my avatar name 'Zaotar,' popularizing it so that schoolkids will think it's cool again.

    Alas, it's still not working.
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1168 - October 26, 2016, 12:29 AM

    Zoroastrianism only ever really worked for Iranians, and even in Iran (and Armenia) it struggled against local traditions, especially Mithraic traditions. At least, if we're to believe Pourshariati and Crone, which I do...
  • Qur'anic studies today
     Reply #1169 - October 26, 2016, 12:52 AM

    Thank you for all the input.
    I know Zoroastrianism wasnt very good in proselytizing  and rather left that to Judaism, but I think it is strange since the Persians conquered Jerusalem in 614 that Zoroastrianism isnt referred to in Quran. The invading Persians must have adhered to it and have tried to do something with their religion, no?
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