January 23, 2008
YOU HAVE TO BE AN AWFULLY WELL-OFF WESTERNER...:
REVIEW: 'God's Crucible: Islam and the Making of Europe, 570-1215' by David Levering Lewis (Tim Rutten, 1/23/08, Los Angeles Times)
Like many a writer and artist before him, Lewis is in thrall to an idealized Umayyad Spain, that island of comparative tolerance and intellectual freedom, undoubted prosperity and physical beauty that ornaments the medieval landscape. Even now, al-Andalus seems more poem than place, site of the Alhambra, the great Mosque of Cordova, the patio houses of Granada and home to Averroës and Maimonides. The problem is that Lewis is intent on making a general case with a society that stands as such an exception to other states of its era, whether Muslim or Christian. In fact, Umayyad Spain benefited from any number of unique factors: the extraordinary statecraft of its founder, Abd al-Rahman I, and some of his more able successors, the necessity of maintaining a balance of power in an unusually polyglot population and Spain's physical distance from contemporary centers of Muslim and Christian power.Lewis sets out to show that the failure of what he calls "the jihad east of the Pyrenees" is "one of the most significant losses in world history." He argues that the Frankish defeat of the Islamic invaders at Poitiers in 732 and the subsequent poetic glorification of Roland's sacrifice to cover Charlemagne's retreat from his own incursion into Spain were "pivotal moments in the creation of an economically retarded, balkanized and fratricidal Europe that, by defining itself in opposition to Islam, made virtues out of hereditary aristocracy, persecutory religious intolerance, cultural particularism and perpetual war . . . 'winning' at Poitiers actually meant that the economic, scientific and cultural levels that Europeans attained in the 13th century could almost certainly have been achieved more than three centuries earlier had they been included in the Muslim world empire."
In other words, the West would be better off if it had been incorporated into an all-conquering Islamic empire in the early Middle Ages.
OK.
Still, it's fair to wonder why, if that's true, the West ended up with the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution and the Scientific Revolution and the Islamic world got chronic underdevelopment, a pervasive religious obscurantism, Al Qaeda and the trust fund states of the Arabian peninsula?
...to envy the Moor. Posted by Orrin Judd at January 23, 2008 8:48 AM
"Still, it's fair to wonder why, if that's true, the West ended up with the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution and the Scientific Revolution and the Islamic world got chronic underdevelopment, a pervasive religious obscurantism, Al Qaeda and the trust fund states of the Arabian peninsula?"
I once had a well educated friend respond to a similar question by claiming that "the Crusaders burned all their [i.e., the Muslim world] libraries" which pretty much ended the conversation because how do you respond to something like that?
The idea that the Battle of Tours was a setback for Europe has been aired before.
"Had Charles Martel not been victorious at Poitiers--Already, you see, the world had fallen into the hands of the Jew, so gutless a thing is Christianity!--then we should in all probablity have been converted to Mohammadanism, that cult which glorifies heroism and which opens up the seventh Heaven to the bold warrior alone. Then the Germanic races would have conquered the world. Christanity alone prevented them from doing so." Adolph Hitler, Table Talk, (August 28, 1942.)
Posted by: Lou Gots at January 23, 2008 5:17 PMThe idea that the Battle of Tours was a setback for Europe has been aired before.
"Had Charles Martel nt ben victorious at Poitiers--Already, you see, the world had fallen into the hands of the Jew, so gutless a thing is Christianity!--then we should in all probablity have been converted to Mohammadanism, that cult which glorifies heroism and which opens up the seventh Heaven to the bold warrior alone. Then the Germanic races would have conquered the world. Christanity alone prevented them from doing so." Adolph Hitler, Table Talk, (August 28, 1942.)
Posted by: Lou Gots at January 23, 2008 5:47 PMTours was an overrated victory. Constantinople staving off Muslim sieges until the 15th century was far more crucial in keeping Europe Christian.
Posted by: Ali Choudhury at January 24, 2008 6:58 AMThere were vast Muslim libraries in Jerusalem? Who knew?
Lou - very well done.
Posted by: ratbert at January 24, 2008 7:31 AM