Christian thought in the medieval Islamicate world : Abdisho of Nisibis and the apologetic tradition
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Bibliographic Information
Christian thought in the medieval Islamicate world : Abdisho of Nisibis and the apologetic tradition
(Oxford Oriental monographs)
Oxford University Press, 2022
- : hbk
- Other Title
-
Christian thought in the medieval Islamicate world : ʿAbdīshōʿ of Nisibis and the apologetic tradition
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [245]-285) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Christian Thought in the Medieval Islamicate World: 'Abdisho' of Nisibis and the Apologetic Tradition is the first monograph-length study and intellectual biography of 'Abdisho' of Nisibis (d. 1318), bishop and polymath of the Church of the East. Focusing on his works of apologetic theology, it examines the intellectual strategies he employs to justify Christianity against Muslim (and to a lesser extent Jewish)
criticisms. Better known to scholars of Syriac literature as a poet, jurist, and cataloguer, 'Abdisho' wrote a considerable number of works in the Arabic language, many of which have only recently come to light. He flourished at a time when Syriac Christian writers were becoming increasingly indebted to Islamic models of intellectual production. Yet many
of his writings were composed during mounting religious tensions following the official conversion of the Ilkhanate to Islam in 1295. In the midst of these challenges, 'Abdisho' negotiates a centuries-long tradition of Syriac and Arabic apologetics to remind his readers of the verity of the Christian faith. His engagement with this tradition reveals how anti-Muslim apologetics had long shaped the articulation of Christian identity in the Middle East since the emergence of
Islam. Through a selective process of encyclopaedism and systematisation, 'Abdisho' navigates a vast corpus of Syriac and Arabic apologetics to create a synthesis and theological canon that remains authoritative to this day.
Table of Contents
Introduction: 'A Constant but not Frozen Tradition'
1: Authority, Compilation, and the Apologetic Tradition
2: The Life and Times of a 'Most Obscure Syrian'
3: The One is Many and the Many Are One: ]cAbd=ish=o]c's Trinitarian Thought
4: Debating Natures and Persons: ]cAbd=ish=o]c's Contribution to Christology
5: Christian Practices, Islamic Contexts: Discourses on the Cross and Clapper
Conclusion: A Tapestry Woven from Many Cloths
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