Bagdad – mittelalterliches Dialogzentrum zwischen Christen und Muslimen – mit Update

Damien Janos:
Ideas in Motion in Baghdad 
and Beyond

Philosophical and Theological Exchanges between Christians and Muslims  in the Third/Ninth and Fourth/Tenth Centuries


Leiden (NL): Brill  2016, X, 480 pp., illustr.
ISBN13: 
9789004306028 — E-ISBN:  978900430626
Go to Online Edition
     mit Inhaltsverzeichnis & Abstracts
 >>>

Verlagsinformation
This volume contains a collection of articles focusing on the philosophical and theological exchanges between Muslim and Christian intellectuals living in Baghdad during the classical period of Islamic history, when this city was a vibrant center of philosophical, scientific, and literary activity. The philosophical accomplishments and contribution of Christians writing in Arabic and Syriac represent a crucial component of Islamic society during this period, but they have typically been studied in isolation from the development of mainstream Islamic philosophy. The present book aims for a more integrated approach by exploring case studies of philosophical and theological cross-pollination between the Christian and Muslim traditions, with an emphasis on the Baghdad School and its main representative, Yaḥyā ibn ʿAdī.
Contributors:
Carmela Baffioni, David Bennett, Gerhard Endress, Damien Janos, Olga Lizzini, Ute Pietruschka, Alexander Treiger, David Twetten, Orsolya Varsányi, John W. Watt, Robert Wisnovsky.
Biographical note: Damien Janos (PhD, McGill University, 2009) has worked
for several years as a postdoctoral researcher in Canadian and German institutions.
 His research focuses primarily on the history of Arabic philosophy
 and especially on the works of al-Fārābī and Avicenna.

Reviews: „There are rich seams in the essays gathered here, 

and specialists in medieval philosophy (in the main) will benefit from them …
What they make undeniably clear is that the lines of continuity
from the intellectual world of the pre-Islamic past remained strong and unbroken,
despite all of the political and religious upheavals that might have disrupted or broken them.“
David Thomas in Nazariyat, 3.1 (2016).


“…this collection of papers, edited by Damien Janos,
… represents a significant milestone: Janos’ own paper is probably
the most interesting article ever published on
Abū Bišr Mattā,
founder of the Baghdad school, and there are several important studies
of
Ibn ʿAdī as well.
 These investigations of the Baghdad Peripatetics are contextualized
with pieces on the wider development of Christian thought.”
Peter Adamson in IHIW, 5 (2017).

Madinat al-Salam, Hauptstadt des Abbassidenreiches (9. Jh.
Round City of Bagdad (wikipedia.en)

  Vgl. die Ausstellung
  im Institut du Monde Arabe 
  (IMA), Paris: 

  Bagdad : redécouvrir
   Madinat al-Salam,

   avec Assassin’s Creed® Mirage

   Exposition au musée de l’IMA, 
   28 février 2024 – 12 janvier 2025