The Jesuits in Syria: 1625-1683: Fishers of Men

历史、传记

The Jesuits in Syria: 1625-1683: Fishers of Men

by: Mazin Tadros (Author)

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan

Edition: 2024th

Publication Date: 2024/7/27

Language: English

Print Length: 290 pages

ISBN-10: 3031636074

ISBN-13: 9783031636073

Book Description

This book examines cross-cultural encounters of the Jesuit missionary enterprise in early mode Southwest Asia. It analyzes the early mission to Syria, paying attention to the key interlocutors of the Jesuits and the many challenges they experienced in their exchanges with other Europeans, Ottoman officials, and Easte Christians. It demonstrates that there was nominal Muslim-Christian dialogue and important relationships formed between the Jesuits and their Christian and Muslim hosts. The Jesuits in Syria shows that the Jesuits worked in a very complex environment, where competing factions of Europeans, European religious, Easte Christians, Arab Muslims, Turkish officials, and Turkish Muslims, not to mention “renegades,” played important roles. The book examines missionary correspondence and other complementary sources. It also contrasts the way that the Jesuits wrote about their efforts inteally with how they addressed the same topics in “public” documents, either printed or manuscript. It shows that the Jesuits described Islam and Syria in several ways, depending on the nature of the sources. For inteal audiences, they wrote of their challenges with Franciscans, French, and Venetian consular figures, and Ottoman officials. For the broader public, whether in Jesuit colleges or in print, they harped on the problems posed by “schismatics” and Muslims. In this way, this volume enriches the story of the early mode Mediterranean.

About the Author

This book examines cross-cultural encounters of the Jesuit missionary enterprise in early mode Southwest Asia. It analyzes the early mission to Syria, paying attention to the key interlocutors of the Jesuits and the many challenges they experienced in their exchanges with other Europeans, Ottoman officials, and Easte Christians. It demonstrates that there was nominal Muslim-Christian dialogue and important relationships formed between the Jesuits and their Christian and Muslim hosts. The Jesuits in Syria shows that the Jesuits worked in a very complex environment, where competing factions of Europeans, European religious, Easte Christians, Arab Muslims, Turkish officials, and Turkish Muslims, not to mention “renegades,” played important roles. The book examines missionary correspondence and other complementary sources. It also contrasts the way that the Jesuits wrote about their efforts inteally with how they addressed the same topics in “public” documents, either printed or manuscript. It shows that the Jesuits described Islam and Syria in several ways, depending on the nature of the sources. For inteal audiences, they wrote of their challenges with Franciscans, French, and Venetian consular figures, and Ottoman officials. For the broader public, whether in Jesuit colleges or in print, they harped on the problems posed by “schismatics” and Muslims. In this way, this volume enriches the story of the early mode Mediterranean.

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