Μπάουερσοκ, Το χωνευτήρι του Ισλάμ (2021)
[Bibliography]

Abbreviation
Μπάουερσοκ, Το χωνευτήρι του Ισλάμ (2021)
Form of publication
Book

Γ. Ο. Μπάουερσοκ, Το χωνευτήρι του Ισλάμ, Λευτέρης Π. Γραμματόπουλος (μτφρ) (Μορφωτικό Ίδρυμα Εθνικής Τραπέζης, Αθήνα 2021)

ISBN / ISSN
ISBN 13: 978-960-250-786-5
First edition
Title of first edition
G. W. Bowersock , The Crucible of Islam ,
Publisher of first edition
Harvard University Press
Date of publication of first edition
2017
Data

This is the Greek edition of the book: G. W. Bowersock , The Crucible of Islam (Athens 2021) first published in English by the Harvard University Press in 2017(ISBN 9780674057760 Hardcover, ISBN 9780674237728 paperback).

“Little is known about Arabia in the sixth century CE. Yet from this distant time and place emerged a faith and an empire that stretched from the Iberian peninsula to India. Today, Muslims account for nearly a quarter of the global population. Glen Warren Bowersock seeks to illuminate this most obscure and yet most dynamic period in the history of Islam—from the mid-sixth to mid-seventh century—exploring why arid Arabia proved to be such fertile ground for Muhammad’s prophetic message, and why that message spread so quickly to the wider world.

In Muhammad’s time Arabia stood at the crossroads of great empires, a place where Christianity, Judaism, and local polytheistic traditions vied for adherents. Mecca, Muhammad’s birthplace, belonged to the part of Arabia recently conquered by the Ethiopian Christian king Abraha. But Ethiopia lost western Arabia to Persia following Abraha’s death, while the death of the Byzantine emperor in 602 further destabilized the region. Within this chaotic environment, where lands and populations were traded frequently among competing powers and belief systems, Muhammad began winning converts to his revelations. In a troubled age, his followers coalesced into a powerful force, conquering Palestine, Syria, and Egypt and laying the groundwork of the Umayyad Caliphate.

The crucible of Islam remains an elusive vessel. Although we may never grasp it firmly, Bowersock offers the most detailed description of its contours and the most compelling explanation of how one of the world’s great religions took shape.”

G. W. Bowersock is Professor Emeritus of Ancient History at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.
Key words
Abbasids, dynasty.
Arab sources / Arabic sources.
Arab-Byzantine conflicts.
Arabia.
Arabia Petraea.
Arabian Peninsula.
Arabs.
Byzantine Empire.
Byzantine sources.
Caliph.
Caliphate.
Caravan routes.
Christians of the East.
Constantinople / Polis / Istanbul.
Damascus.
Early Byzantine period.
Egypt, Early Byzantine.
Ethiopia.
Greeks.
Hajj / Pilgrimage.
Heraclius, emperor.
Holy Land.
Indian Ocean.
Islam.
Islamic monument.
Jerusalem.
Jesus Christ.
Jewish religion.
Jews.
John Moschos, monk.
Late Antiquity.
Maurice, emperor.
Mecca.
Mesopotamia.
Middle East.
Monophysites / Monophysitism.
Muslim communities.
Muslims.
Nabateans.
Old Testament.
Palestine.
Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
Persian civilization.
Persian Gulf / The Gulf.
Persian Gulf / Arabian Gulf / the Gulf.
Persians.
Petra, Jordan.
Prophet Muhammad.
Qur'an / Koran.
Red Sea.
Sasanids / Sassanian Persians.
Syria, Byzantine period.
Syriac language.
Umayyad, dynasty.
Yemen.