Late Ancient Christian Anxiety over Islamic Geographies of Containment: Two Examples
Abstract
:1. Ethnicity and Geography
2. Late Ancient Christian Fears of Enslavement and Incarceration
3. Christian Anxiety in Question-and-Answer Literature: Two Examples
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | My use of hegemony throughout is influenced by Antonio Gramsci’s concept of cultural hegemony, loosely understood to be “the ‘spontaneous’ consent given by the great masses of the population to the general direction imposed on social life by the dominant fundamental group; this consent is ‘historically’ caused by the prestige (and consequent confidence) which the dominant group enjoys because of its position and function in the world of production” (Gramsci 1971, p. 12). Of course, Gramsci’s concepts cannot be applied at face value to antiquity. Emilio Zucchetti (2021) has rightfully noted that class systems of antiquity offer different challenges for investigating the function of cultural hegemony. |
2 | For example, Becker (2014) argues that fifth-century incorporation of Goths into the Roman aristocratic elite occurred without relying wholly on the “criterion of ethnic origin” (le critère de l’origine ethnique) and therefore must not be about ethnicity. However, such a slim definition of ethnicity that focuses solely on geographic origins fails to take into account the capacious social construction of ethnicity from features that Kaldellis highlights, such as a “kinship-based view of Romanness” (Kaldellis 2019, p. 48). |
3 | Some key examples include (Hoyland 1997; Penn 2015; Shoemaker 2016; Sahner 2018; Anthony 2020, esp. 25–58; Shoemaker 2021; van den Bent et al. 2022). |
4 | On these two texts, see (Penn 2015, pp. 125, 183–84). Also see the Book of Main Points 13.142, 154, and 167 (Shoemaker 2021, pp. 186–87, 200; Penn 2015, pp. 89, 98, 107) regarding enslavement as something other than political force or mere historical coincidence. |
5 | Frustratingly, we do not have much written material from the Umayyad period, and what material we do have was often revised in the Abbasid period, making it difficult to ascertain how Abbasid perspectives on their Umayyad predecessors affect surviving texts. On the potential for capital punishment for opposition to Muhammad, see Qur’ān 5:33. In early Islamic Egypt, the norm for incarceration was focused on those who failed to pay debts or fines. See (Sijpesteijn 2018); O.Frange 632. |
6 | For a contrary position, see (Kaler 2013). |
7 | A related text, The Questions of John to Abraham, suggest that Abraham is speaking to John from paradise. 3 Apocr. Apoc. John is less clear. See (Bonar et al. 2020, p. 459). |
8 | The English translation, modified slightly here, can be found in (Bonar et al. 2020, p. 446). |
9 | The Greek text can be found in Bonar and Burke (2020, p. 421). This reading is present in the Athens MS (A), whereas the Athos MS (L) differs slightly by not mentioning imprisonment and by more explicitly referencing the resurrection. |
10 | Greek ethnic and people-group terms like ἔθνος remain important for early Byzantine writers. The ninth-century Apocryphal Apocalypse of Leo of Constantinople 14 describes Muslims in post-conquest attacks led by the Mahdi during Leo IV’s reign in the 770s CE as a “nation from the east” (ἔθνος ἀπὸ ἀνατολῶν), whereas a tenth-century Arabic translation of Ptolemy’s Tetrabiblos 2.3 that al-Hamdānī commented on in his Description of the Arab Peninsula (Sifat jazīrat al-‘Arab 39) equates ἔθνος with ummah. See (Heiss and Hovden 2016, pp. 62–63; Maisano 1975, pp. 88–89). |
11 | |
12 | e.g., Romanos, Hymn 153.23; Qur’ān 2:3. More broadly, see (Minow 2015). |
13 | The Greek text of Anastasius’s Questions and Answers can be found in Richard and Munitiz (2006, p. 131). See also Question 49, in which Jews and Arabs are described as lacking the Holy Spirit because they do not cry when they sin. |
14 | Anastasius, Answer 26.2 (Munitiz 2011, p. 107; Richard and Munitiz 2006, pp. 52–53). See also Question 81, in which Anastasius provides physiognomic explanations for ethnic distinctions between Christians and Arabs regarding childbearing. |
15 | (Richard and Munitiz 2006, pp. 156–57). In some manuscript traditions, John Chrysostom provides the answer here and is incorporated into Anastasius’s erotapokritic repertoire. |
16 |
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Bonar, C.E. Late Ancient Christian Anxiety over Islamic Geographies of Containment: Two Examples. Religions 2024, 15, 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101225
Bonar CE. Late Ancient Christian Anxiety over Islamic Geographies of Containment: Two Examples. Religions. 2024; 15(10):1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101225
Chicago/Turabian StyleBonar, Chance E. 2024. "Late Ancient Christian Anxiety over Islamic Geographies of Containment: Two Examples" Religions 15, no. 10: 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101225
APA StyleBonar, C. E. (2024). Late Ancient Christian Anxiety over Islamic Geographies of Containment: Two Examples. Religions, 15(10), 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101225