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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: AJS Review
    Angaben zur Quelle: 47,1 (2023) 105-126
    Keywords: Judaism Relations 12th century ; Christianity ; Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages History 13th century ; Jewish pilgrims and pilgrimages History Middle Ages, 600-1500 ; Eretz Israel Boundaries
    Abstract: The Boundaries of the Land of Israel is a late thirteenth-century guidebook that describes several itineraries in the Holy Land. Critics have lauded it as the culmination of late medieval Jewish travel literature, and have noted its sophistication in bringing unusual exegetical depths to the descriptions of holy sites. While questions of its exact dating and authorship have long been debated, its intellectual and literary provenance has been largely taken for granted. Mostly, scholars have overlooked the polemical ambition that underlies the way the author chose to expound upon the Holy Land. Drawing on bellicose messianic traditions that originated with the founders of the Jewish community in Frankish Acre, this treatise, I argue, sought to show how the Land itself makes manifest the meaning of Scripture. Consequently, the Land of Israel is seen not only to reject the rule of Muslims and Christians, but also to disprove their respective interpretive traditions.
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9780812253337
    Language: English
    Pages: x, 288 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2021
    Series Statement: 〈〈The〉〉 Middle Ages series
    DDC: 809/.933581
    Keywords: Literature, Medieval History and criticism ; War in literature ; Crusades in literature ; Jihad in literature ; War Religious aspects To 1500 ; History ; Religions Relations To 1500 ; History ; Crusades ; Middle East Ethnic relations To 1500 ; History ; Kreuzzüge ; Juden ; Geschichte ; Naher Osten ; Ethnische Beziehungen ; Geschichte 1100-1300 ; Gelobtes Land ; Einwanderung ; Geschichte 1100-1300
    Abstract: "This is a book about how Near Eastern communities clustered around pious warfare as a set of literary conventions and how these dialogical conventions infiltrated the semantics of contemporary authors"--
    Note: Enthält Literaturverzeichnis auf Seite [245]-282
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9780812297515
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (320 p.) , 7 illus
    Year of publication: 2021
    Series Statement: The Middle Ages Series
    Keywords: Crusades in literature ; Crusades ; Jihad in literature ; Literature, Medieval History and criticism ; Religions Relations To 1500 ; History ; War in literature ; War Religious aspects To 1500 ; History ; HISTORY / Medieval ; European History ; History ; Medieval and Renaissance Studies ; Religion ; World History
    Abstract: In A Pious Belligerence Uri Zvi Shachar examines one of the most contested and ideologically loaded issues in medieval history, the clash between Christians, Muslims, and Jews that we call the Crusades. He does so not to write about the ways these three groups waged war to hold onto their distinct identities, but rather to think about how these identities were framed in relation to one another. Notions of militant piety in particular provided Muslims, Christians, and Jews paths for thinking about both cultural boundaries and codependencies. Ideas about holy warfare, Shachar contends, were not shaped along sectarian lines, but were dynamically coproduced among the three religions.The final decades of the twelfth century saw a rapid collapse of the Frankish and Ayyubid hegemonies in the Levant, followed by struggles for political dominion that lasted for most of the thirteenth century. The fragmented political landscape gave rise to the formation of multiple coalitions across political, religious, and linguistic divides. Alongside a growing anxiety about the instability of cultural boundaries, there emerged a discourse that sought to realign and reevaluate questions of similarity and difference. Where Christians and Muslims regularly joined forces against their own coreligionists, Shachar writes, warriors were no longer assumed to mark or protect lines of physical or political separation. Contemporary authors recounting these events describe a landscape of questionable loyalties, shifting identities, and unstable appearances.Shachar demonstrates how in chronicles, apocalyptic treatises, and a variety of literary texts in Latin, French, Arabic, Hebrew, and Judeo-Arabic holy warriors are increasingly presented as having been rhetorically and anthropologically shaped through their contacts with their neighbors and adversaries. Writers articulated their thoughts about pious warfare through rhetorical devices that crossed confessional lines, and the meaning and force of these articulations lay in their invocation of tropes and registers that had purchase in the various literary communities of the Near East. By the late twelfth century, he argues, there had emerged a notion that threads through Christian, Muslim, and Jewish texts alike: that the Holy Land itself generates a particular breed of pious warriors by virtue of the hybridity that it encompasses
    Note: In English
    URL: Cover
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