Seeing Islam as Others Saw It

Seeing Islam As Others Saw It: A Survey and Evaluation of Christian, Jewish and Zoroastrian Writings on Early Islam from the Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam series is a book by scholar of the Middle East Robert G. Hoyland.

Seeing Islam as Others Saw It
Book cover
AuthorRobert G. Hoyland
LanguageEnglish
SeriesStudies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam
Subject
  • Islamic Empire—History—622–661—Historiography
  • Islamic Empire—History—661–750—Historiography
  • Middle East—Civilization—To 622—Historiography
PublisherDarwin Press
Publication date
1997
Publication placeUnited States
Media typeHardcover
Pages872
ISBN0-87850-125-8
OCLC36884186
939.4 21
LC ClassDS38.1 .H69 1997

The book contains an extensive collection of Greek, Syriac, Coptic, Armenian, Latin, Jewish, Persian, and Chinese primary sources written between 620 and 780 AD in the Middle East, which provides a survey of eyewitness accounts of historical events during the formative period of Islam.

The book presents the evidentiary text of over 120 seventh-century sources, one of which (Thomas the Presbyter) contains what Hoyland believes is the "first explicit reference to Muhammad in a non-Muslim source:"[1]

In the year 945, indiction 7, on Friday 7 February (634) at the ninth hour, there was a battle between the Romans and the Arabs of Muhammad (tayyaye d-Mhmt) in Palestine twelve miles [19 km] east of Gaza. The Romans fled, leaving behind the patrician Bryrdn,[2] whom the Arabs killed. Some 4000 poor villagers of Palestine were killed there, Christians, Jews and Samaritans. The Arabs ravaged the whole region.

According to Michael G. Morony, Hoyland emphasizes the parallels between Muslim and non-Muslim accounts of history emphasizing that non-Muslim texts often explain the same history as the Muslim ones even though they were recorded earlier. He concludes "Hoyland's treatment of the materials is judicious, honest, complex, and extremely useful."[3]

Sources

edit

Greek sources

edit

West Syrian, Coptic and Armenian sources

edit

East Syrian sources

edit

Latin sources

edit

Chinese sources

edit

Apocalypses and visions

edit

Syriac texts

edit

Greek texts

edit

Hebrew texts

edit

Persian texts

edit

Muslim Arabic texts

edit

Martyrologies

edit

Greek texts

edit

Armenian texts

edit

Syriac texts

edit

Chronicles and histories

edit

Syriac texts

edit

Latin texts

edit

Greek texts

edit

Other

edit

Apologies and disputations

edit

Syriac texts

edit

Christian Arabic texts

edit

Jewish texts

edit

Latin texts

edit

Dubia

edit

See also

edit

References and notes

edit
  1. ^ Hoyland, Seeing Islam As Others Saw It, p. 120
  2. ^ The name "Bryrdn" is unclear; see, e.g., "Biblical and Near Eastern essays: studies in honour of Kevin J. Cathcart", ISBN 0-8264-6690-7, p. 283
  3. ^ Morony, Michael G. (1999). "Review of Seeing Islam as Others Saw It". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 31 (3): 452–453. JSTOR 176224.