Keyword Search | Journal Search | Advanced Search | Browse | Libraries/Archives | New Books | Preferences | Results List | Previous Searches | Help | Feedback
  Save/Mail  

Full View of Record

Choose format: Standard format Catalog card Citation Name tags MARC tags
Record 1 out of 109 No Previous Record   Next Record
Book Number   000248976
ISBN   Link9781845116552
  Link1845116550
Main Entry   LinkAlmond, Ian, 1969-
Title   LinkTwo faiths, one banner :. when Muslims marched with Christians across Europe’s battlegrounds / Ian Almond.
Imprint   LinkLondon ; New York : I.B. Tauris, 2009.
Descr.   246 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
Bibliogr.   Includes bibliographical references and index.
Abstract   When Englishman and Turk fell side by side in the killing fields of the Crimea, it was not the first time that Christian and Muslim blood was shed, and intermingled, in the cause of battling a common foe. It is fashionable today to talk of a ’clash of civilizations’, and of an unbridgeable chasm between the Islamic world and Christendom. But in this bold and iconoclastic book Ian Almond demonstrates that in Europe, the heart of the west, Muslims and Christians were often comrades-in-arms, repeatedly forming alliances to wage war against their own faiths and peoples. As we read of savage battles, deadly sieges and many acts of individual heroism, we learn of Arab troops rallying in their thousands to the banner of a Christian emperor outside the walls of Verona. Of Spanish Muslims standing shoulder to shoulder with their Christian Catalan neighbours in opposition to Castilians. Of Greeks and Turks forming a steadfast bulwark against Serbs and Bulgarians, their mutual enemy. And of tens of thousands of Hungarian Protestants assisting the Ottomans in their implacable and terrifying march on Christian Vienna. As the author shows, any notion that ’Christian Europe’ has long been opposed by a ’Muslim non-Europe’ grossly misrepresents the facts of a rich, complex and - above all - shared history. The motivations for these interfaith alliances were dictated by shifting diplomacies, pragmatic self-interest and realpolitik, not by jihad or religious war. This insight has profound ramifications for our understandings of global politics and current affairs, as well as of religious history and the future shape of Europe.
Subject - Lib.Cong.   LinkMilitary history
  LinkChristianity and other religions -- Islam.
  LinkIslam -- Relations -- Christianity
  LinkEurope -- History, Military
  LinkEurope -- Foreign relations -- Islamic countries
  LinkIslamic countries -- Foreign relations -- Europe
 
Holdings   All items
holdings (2)   Gennadius LibraryLibrary Info
Holdings (5)   Only filtered items

Choose format: Standard format Catalog card Citation Name tags MARC tags

No Previous Record   Next Record


End Session - Preferences - Feedback - Help - Browse - Search - Results List - Previous Searches - Databases

Note: During regular backups of Ambrosia, which occur between 04:00-05:00 A.M. Athens Time (01:00-02:00 A.M. GMT), the system will be unavailable