In Europe and Asia there are many holy sites visited by adherents of different religions. These multi-religious spaces are experienced and interpreted differently, for example either as places of reconciliation or as centers for the crystallization of conflict. In this article, the state of research and previously tested analytical approaches are addressed. In light of empirical examples, analytical tools – based on the ideas of Benjamin Kedar – are refined. It is shown that any analysis must take into consideration the regional interests, as well as any particular power imbalance and context of a given multi-religious site. Therefore, this article argues for a differentiated analytical framework based on a broad empirical basis. The sites ...
The presence of shared or mixed sanctuaries, sacred places where several religious groups perform de...
Multi-religious cohabitation bears immense social and political implications, since the question of ...
This volume explores the ways in which interreligious encounters happen ritually. Drawing upon theol...
Multi-religious places of worship are a continuous phenomenon of the history of religions from antiq...
The paper at the panel "Sacred Places and Multiple Religious Identities: Past and Present" deals wit...
This article applies the comparative methodology proposed by Oliver Freiberger to a case study on Ch...
This book addresses the major generators of conflict and toleration at shared holy places in Palesti...
Connecting religion and politics frequently opens up sensitive issues. Political authorities often t...
This collection of seven essays offers wide-ranging and in-depth studies of locations sacred to Musl...
The present special issue of Entangled Religions has emerged from a conference about ...
‘Ambiguous sanctuaries’ are places in which the sacred is shared. These exist in almost all religion...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and superdiverse. The authors...
This paper argues for an interdisciplinary approach within the study of religion and conflict. Using...
Religion and religious nationalism have long played a central role in many ethnic and national confl...
The great majority of the world's holy cities and sacred shrines attract pilgrims from culturally c...
The presence of shared or mixed sanctuaries, sacred places where several religious groups perform de...
Multi-religious cohabitation bears immense social and political implications, since the question of ...
This volume explores the ways in which interreligious encounters happen ritually. Drawing upon theol...
Multi-religious places of worship are a continuous phenomenon of the history of religions from antiq...
The paper at the panel "Sacred Places and Multiple Religious Identities: Past and Present" deals wit...
This article applies the comparative methodology proposed by Oliver Freiberger to a case study on Ch...
This book addresses the major generators of conflict and toleration at shared holy places in Palesti...
Connecting religion and politics frequently opens up sensitive issues. Political authorities often t...
This collection of seven essays offers wide-ranging and in-depth studies of locations sacred to Musl...
The present special issue of Entangled Religions has emerged from a conference about ...
‘Ambiguous sanctuaries’ are places in which the sacred is shared. These exist in almost all religion...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and superdiverse. The authors...
This paper argues for an interdisciplinary approach within the study of religion and conflict. Using...
Religion and religious nationalism have long played a central role in many ethnic and national confl...
The great majority of the world's holy cities and sacred shrines attract pilgrims from culturally c...
The presence of shared or mixed sanctuaries, sacred places where several religious groups perform de...
Multi-religious cohabitation bears immense social and political implications, since the question of ...
This volume explores the ways in which interreligious encounters happen ritually. Drawing upon theol...