Fr. 179.00

Theophilus of Edessa's Chronicle - And Circulation of Historical Knowledge in Late Antiquity Early

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Robert G. Hoyland is Professor of Islamic History at The Oriental Institute, University of Oxford. Klappentext Theophilus of Edessa was an astrologer in the court of the Muslim caliphs from the 750s to the 780s, a time when their capital, Baghdad, was a thriving centre of culture and trade and one of the most populous and prosperous cities of the world. He was fluent in Greek, Syriac and Arabic, and he used this ability to bring together a number of historical sources in each of these languages and blend them into a single chronicle, written in Syriac, that charted events in the Near East from 590 to the 750s. His work is no longer extant, but it was cited extensively by a number of later historians and Robert Hoyland has collected and translated all these citations so as to give an impression of the scope and content of the original text. This is important, because this chronicle underlies much of our historical knowledge about the Near East in the seventh and eighth centuries. This was a crucial period in the region, witnessing as it did the devastating war between Byzantium and Iran, the Arab conquests and the rise to power of the first Muslim Arab dynasty, the Umayyads (660-750), and their subsequent overthrow by the Abbasids, who moved the capital of the Muslim Empire from Damascus to Baghdad. Hoyland also indicates the links between Theophilus' chronicle and other historical works, by Muslims as well as Christians, in order to illustrate the considerable degree of sharing of historical ideas and information among the various communities of the Near East. The material translated consists of sections of four chronicles that deal with the period 590-750s: one in Greek (Theophanes the Confessor, d. 818), one in Arabic (Agapius of Manbij, fl. 940s) and two in Syriac (Michael the Syrian, d. 1199, and an anonymous author, fl. 1230s, who were both relying on the chronicle of Dionysius of Telmahre, d. 845). The latter three either have not been translated into English before (thus Agapius and Michael the Syrian) or have only been partially translated (the anonymous chronicler of the 1230s). The book also includes a transcription and translation of a section of Agapius' History never previously published. Zusammenfassung A reconstruction of the lost chronicle of Theophilus of Edessa (d.785). Covering 590-760! it describes such world-changing events as the last great war of antiquity between Byzantium and Iran! the Arab conquests! the establishment of a Muslim empire! and the revolution that saw the capital of this empire shift from Damascus to Baghdad. ...

Product details

Authors Robert G. (TRN) Hoyland
Assisted by Robert G Hoyland (Editor), Robert G. Hoyland (Editor), Robert Hoyland (Translation), Robert G Hoyland (Translation), Robert G. Hoyland (Translation)
Publisher University Of Chicago Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 15.12.2011
 
EAN 9781846316975
ISBN 978-1-84631-697-5
No. of pages 368
Dimensions 159 mm x 222 mm x 25 mm
Series Translated Texts for Historians
Liverpool University Press - T
Translated Texts for Historians
Translated Texts for Historian
Liverpool University Press - T
Subject Humanities, art, music > History > Antiquity

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