Image for God's crucible Islam and the making of Europe  570 to 1215

God's crucible Islam and the making of Europe 570 to 1215

by Lewis David L.

Synopsis

In this panoramic history of Islamic culture in early Europe, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian reexamines what we once thought we knew.

At the beginning of the eighth century, the Arabs brought a momentous revolution in power, religion, and culture to Dark Ages Europe. David Levering Lewis's masterful history begins with the fall of the Persian and Roman empires, followed by the rise of the prophet Muhammad and the creation of Muslim Spain. Five centuries of engagement between the Muslim imperium and an emerging Europe followed, from the Muslim conquest of Visigoth Hispania in 711 to Latin Christendom's declaration of unconditional warfare on the Caliphate in 1215. Lewis's narrative, filled with accounts of some of the greatest battles in world history, reveals how cosmopolitan, Muslim al-Andalus flourished -- a beacon of cooperation and tolerance between Islam, Judaism, and Christianity -- while proto-Europe, defining itself in opposition to Islam, made virtues out of hereditary aristocracy, religious intolerance, perpetual war, and slavery. A cautionary tale, God's Crucible provides a new interpretation of world-altering events whose influence remains as current as today's headlines.

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Book Information

Copyright year 2008
ISBN-13 9780393064728
ISBN-10 0393064727
Class Copyright
Publisher W.W. Norton
Subject HISTORY;RELIGION
File Size 0 MB
Number of Pages 276
Length of Recording 25
Shelf No. JD112
Ages 20-99