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Author Bevilacqua, Alexander, 1984- author.

Title The republic of Arabic letters : Islam and the European Enlightenment / Alexander Bevilacqua.

Publication Info. Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2018.
©2018

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 South Windsor Public Library - Non Fiction  909 B46R    Check Shelf
Description xv, 340 pages, 24 nunumbered pages of plates : color illustrations, color maps ; 25 cm
Gender group: gdr Men lcdgt
Nationality/regional group: nat Australians lcdgt
Nationality/regional group: nat Italians lcdgt
Occupational/field of activity group: occ University and college faculty members lcdgt
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 207-327) and index.
Summary The foundations of the modern Western understanding of Islamic civilization were laid in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Well after the Crusades but before modern colonialism, Europeans first accurately translated the Qur'an into a European language, mapped the branches of the Islamic arts and sciences, and wrote the history of Muslim societies using Arabic sources. The Republic of Arabic Letters provides the first panoramic treatment of this transformation. Relying on a variety of unpublished sources in six languages, it recounts how Christian scholars first came to a clear-eyed view of Islam. Its protagonists are Europeans who learned Arabic and used their linguistic skills to translate and interpret Islamic civilization. Christians both Catholic and Protestant, and not the secular thinkers of the Enlightenment, established this new knowledge, which swept away religious prejudice and cast aside a medieval tradition of polemical falsehoods. Beginning with the collection of Islamic manuscripts in the Near East and beyond, the book moves from Rome, Paris and Oxford to Cambridge, London and Leiden in order to reconstruct the most important breakthroughs in this scholarly movement. By identifying the individual manuscripts used, The Republic of Arabic Letters reveals how the translators, willing to be taught by Islamic traditions, imported contemporary Muslim interpretations and judgments into the European body of knowledge about Islam. Eventually, their books reached readers like Voltaire and Edward Gibbon, who assimilated not just their factual content but their interpretations, weaving them into the fabric of Enlightenment thought.-- Provided by publisher.
Contents Introduction -- The Oriental library -- The Qur'an in translation -- A new view of Islam -- D'Herbelot's Oriental garden -- Islam in history -- Islam and the Enlightenment -- Epilogue.
Subject Islamic civilization -- Study and teaching -- Europe, Western.
Enlightenment -- Europe.
Europe -- Civilization -- Islamic influences.
Christian scholars -- Europe -- History.
Christian scholars. (OCoLC)fst01768812
Civilization -- Islamic influences. (OCoLC)fst01352372
Enlightenment. (OCoLC)fst00912527
Islamic civilization -- Study and teaching. (OCoLC)fst01730301
Europe. (OCoLC)fst01245064
Europe, Western. (OCoLC)fst01272478
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Standard No. 40027921767
ISBN 9780674975927 (hardcover) (alkaline paper)
0674975928 (hardcover) (alkaline paper)
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