This article discusses the relationships between the three Abrahamic faith communities (Jews, Christians and Muslims) of Damascus during the late 7th A.H./13th A.D. century, employing a textual research study, through the collation and critical review of a range of reference sources; historical and contemporaneous observations, personal narratives and accounts. Preliminary research results attest to a generally congenial co-existence between the religious groups that was occasionally disrupted by inter-communal clashes. Later disturbances occurred between Christians and Muslims communities as a consequence of the Mongol invasion of the city and the later Christian Crusaders. The Abrahamic theological commonality largely tied the three monot...
This paper considers Christian-Muslim relations in modern Syria and the im-portance that eastern Chr...
This study examines the legislative responses of Christian and Jewish religious elites to the proble...
This volume examines the Melkite church from the Arab invasion of Syria in 634 until 969. The Melkit...
This article discusses the relationships between the three Abrahamic faith communities (Jews, Christ...
Abstract The Article is an attempt to investigate formation and interactions of Islam, Judaism and ...
This project asks: What can the documents of Jewish Syrians teach us about the ways medieval Near Ea...
It is difficult to find equally important event in history as the birth of Islam and Arab expansion,...
This is a preliminary report of research in progress on social and cultural change in early Islamic ...
0Following the invasion of Baghdad in 656 (1258), the Mongols headed further west in Muslim lands. ...
grantor: University of TorontoIn the late eleventh century, with the collapse of the Iberi...
This thesis seeks to discover what made it possible for such an extraordinary cultural flourishing t...
International audienceIn a historical perspective, and with a focus on the years immediately followi...
In the present paper two attitudes towards Christianity among Jews in Medieval Iraq are discussed, v...
The Islamic commentators on the Damascus mosque from the eighth to the twelfth centuries demonstrate...
Two big Jewish settlements were sitting on the shores of the Mediterranean in the 11th century: one ...
This paper considers Christian-Muslim relations in modern Syria and the im-portance that eastern Chr...
This study examines the legislative responses of Christian and Jewish religious elites to the proble...
This volume examines the Melkite church from the Arab invasion of Syria in 634 until 969. The Melkit...
This article discusses the relationships between the three Abrahamic faith communities (Jews, Christ...
Abstract The Article is an attempt to investigate formation and interactions of Islam, Judaism and ...
This project asks: What can the documents of Jewish Syrians teach us about the ways medieval Near Ea...
It is difficult to find equally important event in history as the birth of Islam and Arab expansion,...
This is a preliminary report of research in progress on social and cultural change in early Islamic ...
0Following the invasion of Baghdad in 656 (1258), the Mongols headed further west in Muslim lands. ...
grantor: University of TorontoIn the late eleventh century, with the collapse of the Iberi...
This thesis seeks to discover what made it possible for such an extraordinary cultural flourishing t...
International audienceIn a historical perspective, and with a focus on the years immediately followi...
In the present paper two attitudes towards Christianity among Jews in Medieval Iraq are discussed, v...
The Islamic commentators on the Damascus mosque from the eighth to the twelfth centuries demonstrate...
Two big Jewish settlements were sitting on the shores of the Mediterranean in the 11th century: one ...
This paper considers Christian-Muslim relations in modern Syria and the im-portance that eastern Chr...
This study examines the legislative responses of Christian and Jewish religious elites to the proble...
This volume examines the Melkite church from the Arab invasion of Syria in 634 until 969. The Melkit...