Mittelalterliche Geschichte

Aktuelles


Neu erschienen:

Theresa Jäckh, Daniel G. König, Alejandro Peláez Martín, Kate Tinson, Interreligious Communication. Transmediterranean Perspectives (7th–16th Cent.), in: Interreligious Communication. Transmediterranean Perspectives (7th–16th Cent.), hg. von dens. (al-Masāq: Journal of the Medieval Mediterranean 37, 2 2025), S. 1–13,https://doi.org/10.1080/09503110.2025.2502264


Abstract: This introduction lays the conceptual and methodological groundwork for the special issue “Interreligious Communication: Transmediterranean Perspectives (7th–16th Cent.)”. It aims to reassess Jewish-Christian-Muslim relations in the premodern Mediterranean by foregrounding communication as a distinct analytical category. While such relations have been widely studied, their underlying communicative practices—verbal, written, symbolic, embodied—remain undertheorized. Critiquing binary narratives of coexistence versus conflict, the introduction shifts focus from representations of the religious “other” to lived practices of interaction, including those only indirectly documented. It proposes a framework based on communicative acts, settings, and constellations, and introduces a typology of three overlapping levels: intersocietal (between political-religious spheres), intercommunal (between coexisting religious groups), and intracommunal (within religious communities). Emphasizing asymmetry, contingency, and historical context, the introduction argues that small-scale, everyday interactions must be analysed through—and in turn refine—this framework, advancing both theoretical and empirical understandings of interreligious communication in the premodern Mediterranean.

Neu erschienen:

Theresa Jäckh und Hossameldin Ali, Water Communities in the Plain of Palermo. A Neglected Islamic Document from Norman Sicily, in: Der Islam. Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East, 102, 3 (2025), S. 130–167. 

Abstract: The Archivio Storico Diocesano di Palermo conserves a unique Arabic-Islamic document dating to 526/1132 that allows for insights into the legal practices of small-scale water management in the fertile countryside of Sicily's capital city Palermo. Almost entirely neglected by previous scholarship, this article offers the first analysis of the document's legal content and situates it within the wider context of Mālikī law, landscape engineering, and Muslim communal practices in medieval Sicily at a time when Latin-Christian elites came to dominate the possession of resources in Palermo's hinterland. It is equipped with an edition of the Arabic text, an English translation, a reproduction of the document, and a map of water resources in the Conca d'Oro.
 

Veranstaltung:

Interreligious Communication and Decision Making - Historical Perspectives, Modern Practices

A round table discussion jointly organized by "RELCOM: Interreligious Communication in and between the Latin-Christian and the Arabic-Islamic Sphere, funded by the UK-German Funding Initiative in the Humanities (AHRC/DFG) (Durham/Tübingen)" and the GHIL.

How do Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders make legal decisions? How do they look upon the religious 'Other' and interact with them from the perspective of their religious laws? This round table brings together practising religious professionals, jurists and scholars to hear how they deal with modern legal issues whilst considering and integrating historical legal sources.

Guests: Dr Amra Bone, Dr Helen Costigane, Joanne Greenaway, Shaykh Mohammad Yazdani Raza Misbahi, Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain MBE

Moderators: JProf Theresa Jäckh (Durham University/University of Tübingen) and Dr Kate Tinson (Durham University)

Date and venue: 05 February 2025, German Historical Institute London