HIST 275 The Origins of Islam: God, Empire, and Apocalypse (Same as Religion 231) (Not offered 1997-98)*
The rise of Islam in the seventh century C.E. is usually seen, by both Muslim
and non-Muslim historians, as a total break with the past. This course will
challenge that assumption by placing the rise of Islam in the context of
the history of late antiquity (c.300-700 C.E.). The first half of the course
will examine the impact of Judeo-Christian monotheism in the ancient world,
the rise of confessional empires, articulation of new ideas about holiness
and its relation to sexuality and the transformations undergone by Judaism,
Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Manichaeism. We shall examine the conversion
of these traditions with classical paganism and philosophy, the internal
struggle within traditions to define rules of interpretation, the impact
of ascetic, iconoclastic and apocalyptic ideas and, finally, polemics among
the traditions. Special attention will be given to borderlands (Armenia,
Syria, and Arabia) where the problems of regionalism and religious diversity
were prominent. We will then examine the career of Muhammad (PBUH) in the
context of Arabia, the spread of the Islamic empire into Christian and Iranian
worlds, the impact of apocalyptic expectations, the fixation of religious
decision-making within the tradition and the question of conversion and religious
diversity within the commonwealth of Islam. The course will end with the
flourishing of the Abbasid empire in the ninth century.
Course requirements include: two five-page papers and a final research project.
Each class will use a case study approach focusing on one artifact, textual,
artistic or architectural. Open to all classes without prerequisites. Groups
C and D
DARROW