Preliminary Considerations on Dionysius Bar Ṣalībī's Islamic Sources
Though Dionysius Bar Ṣalībī (d. 1171) wrote his Disputation Against the Arabs during the so-called ‘Syriac Renaissance’ (c. 1026-1318), a period characterized by an increased Christian awareness of Islamic literary culture, to date no sustained appeal has been made for a direct use of Islamic sources in composing this work. This situation seems largely influenced by Alphonse Mingana who categorically rejected Bar Ṣalībī’s knowledge of Islamic literature, particularly the Arabic Qurʾān. This article proposes to take a fresh look at the potential traces of Islamic sources the work displays. Such a reading reveals traces of at least five other Islamic literary genres besides the Qurʾānic excerpts for which the work is well known: Muḥammad’s biography (sīra), heresiography, exegesis (tafsīr), prophetic traditions (ḥadīth), and the so-called ‘stories of the prophets’ (qiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ). To prepare the way for a closer assessment of Bar Ṣalībī’s Islamic sources, the aim of this paper is to survey the various allusions to and quotations of the materialpb. 357 reminiscent of these five additional literary genres, and to reflect on their significance with regards to Bar Ṣalībī’s interculturality.
Though the earliest interactions between Syriac Christians and Muslims
within the nascent Islamic empire may have been characterized by more hybridity and
ill-defined borders than was once suspected,1
* This article presents some intermediary results of my
current PhD project on the apologetic theology and sources of Dionysius Bar
Ṣalībī’s Disputation Against the Arabs, particularly
his use of the Qurʾān and other Islamic texts. I thank the FWO for
generously supporting my research. I also wish to thank James E. Walters for
his patience with me and for checking my English.
Thus
the thesis of Michael P. Penn, Envisioning Islam: Syriac
Christianity and the Early Muslim World (Pennsylvania: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 2015).
For overviews of the Syriac
apologetic texts in response to Islam, see Sidney H. Griffith, “Disputes
with Muslims in Syriac Christian Texts: From Patriarch John (d. 648) to Bar
Hebraeus (d. 1286),” in Religionsgespräche im
Mittelalter, Wolfenbütteler Mittelalter-Studien 4, ed. B. Lewis and
F. Niewöhner (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1992), 251-273; id., Syriac Writers on Muslims and the Religious Challenge of
Islam (Kottayam: SEERI, 1995); Barbara Roggema, “Pour une lecture
des dialogues islamo-chrétiens en syriaque à la lumière des controverses
internes à l’islam,” in Les controverses religieuses en
syriaque, Études syriaques 13, ed. F. Ruani (Paris: Geuthner,
2016), 261-294. For early Muslim polemics against Christianity, see e.g.
David Thomas, “Early Muslim Responses to
Christianity,” in Christians at the Heart of Islamic Rule:
Church Life and Scholarship in ʿAbbasid
Iraq, The History of Christian-Muslim Relations 1, ed. D. Thomas
(Leiden: Brill, 2003), 231-254.
A critical
edition based on five manuscripts together with an English translation was
published in 2005 by Joseph Amar, Dionysius Bar Ṣalībī: A
Reponse to the Arabs, CSCO 614-615 (Leuven: Peeters, 2005). I have
checked Amar’s edition against the oldest manuscript from the year 1207, Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160 (ff. 245a-278b).
Amar’s translation is the basis for the citations occuring in this paper,
but I regularly applied changes were deemed necessary. For Bar Ṣalībī’s
bio-bibliography, see Stephan D. Ryan, Dionysius bar
Salibi's Factual and Spiritual Commentary on Psalms 73-82, Cahiers
de révue biblique 57 (Paris: J. Gabalda et Cie, 2004), p. 1-14. On the
period of the ‘Syriac Renaissance’, see Herman Teule, “The Syriac
Renaissance,” in The Syriac Renaissance, Eastern
Christian Studies 9, ed. H. Teule et al. (Leuven:
Peeters, 2010), 1-30. Other writers of this period engaged Islam as well in
their theological writings, but none of them is credited for having composed
a seperate work in response to Islam. Some studies on these author’s
apologetics are Herman Teule, “Jacob bar Šakkō, the Book of Treasures and
the Syrian Renaissance,” in Eastern Crossroads. Essays on
Medieval Christian Legacy, Gorgias Eastern Christianity Studies 1,
ed. J.-P. Monferrer-Sala (Piscataway, NJ: Georgias Press, 2007), 143-154;
Salam Rassi, Justifying Christianity in the Islamic Middle
Ages: The Apologetic Theology of ʿAbdīshōʿ bar Brīkhā (d. 1318)
(PhD diss., University of Oxford, 2015); Bert Jacobs, “Unveiling Christ in
the Islamicate World: Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī's Prophetology as a Model for
Christian Apologetics in Gregory Bar ʿEbrōyō’s Treatise on the Incarnation,”
Intellectual History of the Islamicate World
6/1&2 (2018), 187-216.
Part of a larger encyclopedic work that also includes a theological
compendium and disputations against the Jews, Nestorians, Chalcedonians, and
Armenians, Against the Arabs is a quite significant hallmark
in the history of Christian-Muslim relations.4
See my PhD dissertation for a discussion of the larger
literary context. On the content and significance of the Disputation Against the Arabs, see also the overviews of Syriac
apologetic texts in nr. 2, as well as Sidney H. Griffith, “Dionysius bar Ṣalībī on the Muslims,” in IV
Symposium Syriacum: Literary Genres in Syriac Literature,
Orientalia Christiana Analecta 229, ed. H. Drijvers et
al. (Rome: Pontificium Institutum Studiorum Orientalium, 1987), p.
353-365; Herman Teule, “Dionysius Bar Ṣalibi,” Christian-Muslim Relations: A Bibliographical History 3 (Leiden:
Brill, 2011), 665-70, p. 667-70.
In these first two mimrē, Bar Ṣalībī relies on
four types of arguments to uphold the veracity of Christianity. Besides the usual
use of arguments from ‘nature and scripture’, he also presents testimonies from the
pagan sages,5
Bar Ṣalībī
provides two such testimony lists: in chapter 8 concerning the Trinity, and
in chapter 19 for the Incarnation. Only the latter list was studied in
Sebastian P. Brock, ”A Syriac Collection of Prophecies of the Pagan
Philosophers,” Orientalia Lovaniensia Periodica 14
(1983): 203-246; id., “Some Syriac Excerpts from Greek Collections of Pagan
Prophecies,” Vigilae Christianae 38 (1984):
77-90.
On early Christian approaches to the
Qurʾān, see Mark Beaumont, “Early Christian Interpretation of the Qurʾān,”
Transformation 22/4 (2005): 195-203; Sidney H.
Griffith, “The Qurʾān in Arab Christian Texts; the Development of an
Apologetical Argument: Abū Qurrah in the Maǧlis of
al-Maʾmūn,” Parole de l’Orient 24 (1999): 203-233;
id., “Christians and the Arabic Qurʾān:
Prooftexting, Polemics, and Intertwined Scriptures,” Intellectual History of the Islamicate World 2 (2014): 243-266;
Clare E. Wilde, Approaches to the
Qur’an in Early Christian Arabic Texts (750CE-1258 CE)
(Palo Alto, California: Academica Press,
2014).
The Issue of the Sources
Like other writers of the Syriac Renaissance, Bar Ṣalībī’s favored
method of composition, as displayed in Against the Arabs,
is to compile previous works and combine, edit, and shape them to his own
purposes. The identification of his sources and the assessment of how he makes
uses of them, however, is still largely uncharted territory. That he principally
draws, as might be expected, on Syriac and Christian Arabic sources has recently
received some initial attention.7
See Martin Heimgartner, Timotheos I.,
Ostsyrischer Patriarch: Disputation mit dem Kalifen Al-Mahdī,
CSCO 631-2 (Leuven: Peeters, 2011), tr.,
p. xxvii (nr. 105); Shabo Talay, “Aus dem polemischen Genre des
Syrischen: Die luqbal-Schriften von Bar Ṣalībī und Bar Šūšan,” in Orientalia Christiana, Festschrift für Hubert Kaufhold
zum 70. Geburtstag, ed. P. Bruns and H. O. Luthe(Wiesbaden:
Harrassowitz, 2013), 511-521, p. 517-8. On Bar
Ṣalībī’s use of the now lost Chronicle of
Dionysius of Tell-Maḥrē (d. 845) in the opening chapter of the Disputation, see Bert Jacobs, “Tentative
Reconstruction of Dionyius of Tell-Maḥrē’s Account of the Rise of Islam
through Three Dependant Texts,” forthcoming.
See
Teule, “The Syriac Renaissance,” p. 23-8.
This state of affairs appears to be largely indebted to the first
modern scholar to have dealt with the text, Alphonse Mingana (1878-1937), who in
1925 not only rejected Bar Ṣalībī’s knowledge of the Arabic Qurʾān, but also of
Islamic literature altogether. Basing his argument solely on mimrō III, Mingana was arguing for Bar Ṣalībī’s reliance on a late
seventh or early eighth-century Syriac translation of a pre-standardized
recension of the Qurʾān, or as he called it, “an ancient Syriac translation of
the Ḳurʾān [sic] exhibiting new verses and variants.”9
Alphonse Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac
Translation of the Ḳurʾan Exhibiting New Verses and Variants,” Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 9/1 (1925):
188-235; reprinted with minimal corrections and additions in Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1925, 3-50. The current paper cites from
Mingana’s final version. Recently, Mingana’s study has been reprinted in
a volume seeking to challenge the Qurʾān’s traditional status in Islam,
Which Koran?: Variants,
Manuscripts, Linguistics, ed. Ibn Warraq (Amherst, Prometheus Books, 2008; 2011). Mingana’s study and
translation of the quotation section of mimrō III
was based on a single manuscript, Mingana Syriac
89 (1715 AD). After completion of his study, he was able to
compare this manuscript with Harvard Syriac 91
(1898 AD), the results of which he described in a supplementary note
appended to the paper. Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p.
29-30.
Though Mingana’s claim of having unearthed evidence of a
non-canonical Qurʾān was soon rejected by prominent contemporary Qurʾānic
scholars such as Gotthelf Bergsträβer,pb. 362 Theodore Nöldeke, and Arthur Jeffery, and
largely ignored by Islamicists ever since, to date no conclusive alternative
account for the provenance of the Qurʾānic translations in Bar Ṣalībī’s work has
been advanced.11
Gotthelf Bergsträβer, “Die Geschichte des
Qurāntexts,” in T. Nöldeke, F. Schwally, G. Bergsträβer, and O. Pretzl,
Geschichte des Qurāns, 3 vols.
(Leipzig: Dieterich’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1909, 1919, 1938),
Vol. 3, p. 100-2. For Nöldeke’s brief epistolary response from
April 13, 1925, see ibid., p. 102 (nr. 1). Bergsträβer’s view that the
variants presented by Mingana are unrelated to the non-canonical
variants known from Muslim sources was endorsed by Arthur Jeffery, Materials for the History of the Text of the Qur’an:
The Old Codices (Leiden: Brill, 1937), p. 14-15 (nr
1).
Griffith, Syriac
Writers on Muslims, p. 25.
As we shall see, Mingana’s ‘extremely’ low estimation of Bar
Ṣalībī’s interculturality was not only founded on a flawed manuscript basis, but
a fresh reading of the work brings to light traces of at least five other
Islamic literary genres in addition to the Qurʾān. Some of these materials had
been noted by Mingana and were (mistakenly) interpreted as “new verses and
variants [from the Qurʾān],” other materials he missed due to his neglect of
both mimrē I-II and the commentary section of mimrō III.13
See my PhD for a full assessment of Mingana’s proposals.
Classification of Islamic Material by Literary Genre
Although not the first trace of Muslim literature in the work,
we begin our survey with a passage in the commentary section of chapter 25
dealing with works on Muḥammad’s life, since the first half of it was the
sole basis for Mingana’s claim that Bar Ṣalībī’s knowledge of Islamic works
was “extremely meagre.” According to Mingana’s reading of the passage, Bar
Ṣalībī would have thought that Muslims have only two
books in addition to the Qurʾān, the Maghāzī and the
Mukhtāra.14
Mingana, “An Ancient
Syriac Translation,” p. 29-30: “[…] his own knowledge of Muslim
religious and historical books seems to have been extremely meagre.
[…] Of the innumerable Muslim works of ḥadīth
and history, preceding the twelfth century, the author had
apparently heard only of the Maghāzi and the
Mukhtāra (!), and
even these he had not seen and read; he was aware of their existence
only through hearsay: ‘the Muslims say that they have …’ A man of
this calibre would hardly be able to translate the Ḳurʾān [sic] or
to use the early works of tradition in a controversial work between
Christians and Muslims.” (Mingana’s italics)
Ms. Mingana Syriac 89, f. 76a. This
manuscript is nowadays easily consultable online, see
http://vmr.bham.ac.uk/Collections/Mingana/ Syriac_89.
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the
Arabs, ed. p. 111; tr. 103. Amar’s manuscripts include Harvard Syriac 91, the manuscript which
Mingana later used for comparison in his supplementary notes.
The Muslims say that they have two other books in
addition to the Qurʾān by which the lifespan of Muḥammad
is known (da-b-hūn metīdaʿ yubōlō d-Mwḥmd):
the Maghāzī (ܡܓܐܙܝ), which records the actions of Muḥammad in battle, and
(also) at the end of the book which they call the Mukhtāra (ܡܘܟܬܪܐ), they report
on the lifespan (yubōleh) of Muḥammad.17
Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f.
271a-b. Cf. Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs,
ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103-4. Also the word yubōleh occuring at the end of this passage appears to be
a better reading than yuqneh, ‘his image’,
the reading attested in the manuscripts consulted by Amar.
Thus, the mentioned “two other books” do not at all refer to
Muslim literature in general, as Mingana understood it, but only to particular works narrating the life of Muḥammad.
Apparently, Bar Ṣalībī acquired this knowledge from Muslim informants,
presumably orally or through a writing. As for the first work refered to,
there are numerous Islamic writings entitled Kitāb
al-Maghāzī (Book of Expeditions) reporting
on Muḥammad’s raids and military campagns during the Medinan period, such as
those of Ibn Isḥāq (d. c. 770) and al-Wāqidī (d. 823), to name only two
important writers.18
See the works surveyed by F. Sezgin, Geschichte
des arabischen Schrifttums, Vol. 1 (Leiden: Brill, 1967),
237-56, 275-302; and more generally M. Hinds, “Al-Maghāzī,” EI2 5
(1986): 1161-6.
Although Bar Ṣalībī only refers to sīra works the Muslims say they have in their possession, without claiming any direct affinity with them, he does appear to be familiar with the basic Muslim narrative of Muḥammad’s early years as seen from the account that follows immediately thereafter, which was completely ignored by Mingana:
pb. 365 “They also call him Aḥmad (cf. Q 61:6), as if it is the
same as Muḥammad, son of ʿAbdallāh, son of ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib. When his father
died, his uncle Abū Ṭālib raised him, and his foster mother was called
ḥalīma. When he was forty years old, he went around saying that two angels
had come, tied up his stomach, washed his heart, and restored it to his
body. He also saw along the road a tree and a rock that greeted him. One day
he saw an angel who tried to strangle him three times, saying to him:
‘Recite in the name of your Lord, who made man from clay. Recite by your
honorable Lord, who instructed with the pen that wrote’ (Q 96:1-4).19
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103-4.
Amar misread several proper names at the beginning of this passage.
The oldest manuscript has an additional sentence which adds a
somewhat polemical twist to the narrative: “Muḥammad and his foster
mother put him [the angel] down, as he [the angel] was about to
choke him with the pen that wrote”, see Ms. Syriac
Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 271b.
Very similar descriptions of Muḥammad’s genealogy, his
upbringing as an orphan, the miraculous events prefiguring his prophetic
mission, and the first revelation said to be brought to him by the angel
Gabriel at mount ḥirāʾ, are readily found in the sīra
literature.20
See e.g. Alfred Guillaume, The Life of Muḥmmad: A
Translation of Ibn Isḥaq’s Sīrat rasūl Allāh (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1982), p. 69-72 (on his birth, foster
mother, and the washing of his heart by two men in white when he was
an infant); p. 79 (Abū Ṭālib becomes Muḥammad’s guardian after the
death of his grandfather); p. 104-106 (on the stones and trees
greeting him and the first revelation he received, i.e. Q 96:1-5).
Note the slight discrepancy that Abū Ṭālib became Muḥammad’s
guardian after the death of his grandfather ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, not
after the death of his father, as Bar Ṣalībī wrote.
See n. 7 for my forthcoming
study on this chapter.
The earliest trace of Islamic literature in the work is found
as early as chapter two, which discusses the divisions that arose in the
early Muslim community. Bar Ṣalībī writes that “approximately 73 heresies
(heresīs)” belonging to four principal sects
sprang up among Muḥammad’s people after his death. These four ‘mother’ sects
call themselves al-Shīʿa, al-Khawārij, al-Muʿtazila,
and al-Sunna, but their opponents call them
respectively al-Rawāfiḍ, al-Ḥarūriyya, al-Qadariyya, and
al- al-Murjiʾa. For all of these Arabic appelations Bar Ṣalībī also
provides Syriac equivalents.22
See Talay, “Aus dem polemischen Genre,” p.
516-7.
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 5-8, tr. p. 2-9. In his Arabic
Chronicle, Bar ʿEbrōyō includes a similar but more elaborate account
of early Islamic schisms, undoubtedly borrowed from (a) Muslim
source(s), see Bar ʿEbrōyō, Taʾrīkh mukhtaṣar
al-duwal, ed. Ṣalhānī, p. 164-7.
The originality of this account among Syriac Christian texts
on Islam has been pointed out by scholars as Sidney Griffith, Herman Teule,
and Barbara Roggema.24
See the works cited in nr. 2 and 4. Henri Laoust, “La classification
des sectes dans le Farq d’al-Baghdādī,” Revue des Études Islamiques 29 (1961): 19-59;
reprinted in Pluralismes dans l'islam (Paris,
1983), 135-75; id. “La classification des sects dans
l’hérésiographie ashʿarite,” Arabic and Islamic
Studies in Honor of Hamilton A. R. Gibb, ed. G. Makdisi
(Leiden 1965), 377-86.; id., “L'hérésiographie musulmane sous les
Abbassides,” Cahiers de civilisation
médiévale 38 (1967), 157-178; Dominique Sourdel, “Les
classification des sects islamiques dans le Kitāb
al-Milal d’al-Šahrastānī,” Studia
Islamica 31 (1970): 239-247; Claude Gilliot, “Islam,
‘sectes’ et groups d’opposition politico-religieux (VIIe-XIIe
siècles),” Rives nord-méditerranéeennes 10
(2002): 1-13.
Josef van Ess, Der Eine und das Andere. Beobachtungen an
islamischen haresiographischen Texten, 2 vols (Berlin/New
York: De Gruyter, 2011), Vol. 1., p. 77.
According to al-Shahrastānī, the divisions between Muslims
boil down to four fundamental issues: (1) the divine attributes (ṣifāt Allāh); (2) faith and eschatology; (3) divine
determinism (qadar); and (4) the issue of rightful
leadership (imāma).27
Laoust,
“L'hérésiographie musulmane sous les Abbassides,” p. 171.
Teule, “Dionysius Bar Ṣalibi,” p. 665. The Disputation as a whole may even be written in
response to the Muslim destruction of Edessa. After having upheld
the doctrines of the Trinitiy and Incarnation to his own
satisfaction, Bar Ṣalībī somewhat triumphantically writes that,
through his efforts, “the proclamation of Christianity has achieved
victory over the people that has overpowered us because of our sins
(ʿamō d-men ʿelat ḥṭōhayn etʿašan
ʿlayn)”. This important allusion to the fall of Edessa was
mistrans-lated by Amar, see Bar Ṣalībī, Against
the Arabs, ed. p. 81, tr. p. 74.
In the commentary section of mimrō III, Bar Ṣalībī twice refers to opinions of Qurʾānic commentators, whom he calls mfashqōnē. His first reference to Islamic exegetical literature is on the subject of the odd so-called ‘disconnected letters’ (al-ḥurūf al-muqaṭṭaʿa) occuring at the beginning of the second sūra: “Alif Lam Mim. That is the Book, wherein is no doubt, a guidance to the godfearing” (Q 2 :1-2, Arberry). In commen-ting on these verses, Bar Ṣalībī writes:
“(The Qurʾān reads here) ‘that’ (haw) book and not ‘this’ (hōnō) book.29
Bar Ṣalībī may
allude here to the fact that although Muslim exegetes usually
interpret dhālika l-kitāb (Q 2:2) to mean
‘this book’, i.e. the Qurʾān, it literally says ‘that book’. This sentence was not included in Amar’s
translation, though it is present in his edition.
My
emendation.
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 112, tr. p. 104.
Muslim exegetical literature reports a wide range of possible
interpretations for the ‘disconnected letters’ appearing at the beginning of
some 29 sūras.32
On
the large spectrum of interpretations within Sunnī tafsīr, see Martin Nguyen, “Exegesis of the ḥurūf al-muqaṭṭaʿa: Polyvalency in Sunnī
Traditions of Qur’ānic Interpretation,” Journal of
Qurʾānic Studies 14/2 (2012): 1-28.
al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan taʾwīl āy
al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 210.
Ibid., p.
204-228.
al-Qurṭubī, al-Jāmiʿ li-aḥkām al-Qurʾān, ed.
Beirut, p. 241. See Daniel A. Madigan, “Preserved Tablet,” EQ 4 (2004): 261-3.
Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160 has preserved an
additional sentence to Bar Ṣalībī’s comment which may contain his motive for
adducing this information on Muslim exegesis. In it, Bar Ṣalībī appeals to
the authority of Muḥammad to appropriate the contents of the ‘Preserved
Tablet’ to Christianity: “The things he [i.e. the angel Michael] recites
here, he [i.e. Muḥammad] says, are Christians things.”36
Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f.
271b: ܗܠܝܢ ܕܬ̇ܢܐ ܗܪܟܐ ܗܠܝܢ ܕܝܠܢ ܟܖ̈ܝܣܛܝܢܐ
ܐܡܪ݂.
The second reference to Muslim exegesis occurs in his comment
on Q 69:17 about the so-called ḥamlat al-ʿarsh, the
angels bearing the Throne of God who are also mentioned inpb. 370 Q 40:7. Although
in the citation provided by Bar Ṣalībī, “They bear the Throne of your Lord
above them on the eighth day (b-yawmō tmīnōyō),”37
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs,
ed. 110, tr. p. 103.
Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f.
272b. The manuscripts consulted by Amar read ‘to add’ in the
singular (awsef) which is taken to mean that
it is the Qurʾān that adds four angels, see Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. 113, tr. p. 106.
Mingana derived a rather bizarre argument against Bar Ṣalībī’s
translatorship from this comment, see Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac
Translation,” p. 6-7.
Stephen R. Burge, Angels in
Islam: Jalāl al-Dīn al-Suyūtī's al-Ḥabāʾik fī akhbār
al-malāʾik, Culture and Civilization in the Middle East 31
(Oxon: Routledge, 2012), p. 43-4.
al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan
taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 229; Burge, Angels in
Islam, p. 146.
The reason why Bar Ṣalībī found such a doubling of angels absurd is obviously determined by the Biblical lens through which he reads the Qurʾān. As such, he certainly knew that in Ezekiel’s vision only four creatures carry the divine Throne (Ezek 1). He thus indirectly appears to be criticizing Muslim exegetes, and by extension the Qurʾān, for contradicting the Bible, a polemic made repeatedly in the Disputation.
pb. 371Three direct citations of prophetic sayings of Muḥammad recorded in the major Sunnī ḥadīth collections occur among the Qurʾānic excerpts in mimrō III. Among the verses dealing with creation in chapter 25, Bar Ṣalībī quotes a well-known ḥadīth transmitted in various forms about what God created first:
| Disputation, XXV | Sunan Abū Dāwūd |
| And when he [i.e. Muḥammad] wished to speak of
creation, he said: “First He created the pen of the scribe (qnayō d-sōfrō). He said to the pen: ‘Walk and
write!’ But the pen answered: ‘What should I write?’. He said:
‘Write concerning what will happen until the end’.41
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 110, tr. p. 102. |
[…] I heard the Messenger of God (peace be
upon him) say: ‘The first thing God created was the pen (al-qalam)’. He said to it: ‘Write!’ It asked:
‘What should I write, my Lord?’ He said: ‘Write what was decreed
about everything until the Last Hour’ […].42
Sunan Abū Dāwūd, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 5, book 42, 4700, p. 213 (translation slightly adapted). For other versions, see ‘creation’ in A. J. Wensinck, A Handbook of Early Mohammadan Tradition (Leiden: Brill, 1927), p. 49. |
The reason why Bar Ṣalībī found this saying important enough to include is seen from his commentary, in which he makes the error of Muḥammad’s teaching apparent by contrasting it with the Biblical account of creation:
“Moses wrote: ‘In the beginning, God
created heaven and earth’ (Gen 1:1). He said this before [writing that]
(God) created the qalam, that is, the pen (qnayō) of the scribe! And how is God in need of
writing, unless he fears to forget something?!43
Bar Ṣalībī,
Against the Arabs, ed. p. 113, tr. p. 105. Note Bar
Ṣalībī’s use of the Arabic term for pen, qalam.
On another occasion, in chapter 30, Bar Ṣalībī introduces a saying of Muḥammad concerning his community with the words ‘Muḥammad said’:
pb. 372| Disputation, XXX | Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī |
| Muḥammad said: ‘My community is among the
nations as a white spot on a black ox (ūmtō dīly
baynōtʿammē ak ōtōḥwōrtō b-tawrō ukōmō)’.44
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 128, tr. p. 122. |
[…] (Muḥammad) said: ‘My community is among
the nations as a white hair on a black ox (inna
ummatī fī l-umamk-al-shaʿara al-bayḍāʾ fī l-thawr
al-aswad)’.45
Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 8, book 81, 6529, p. 287 (translation slightly adapted). |
Muḥammad’s apparent admittance of the insignificant position of
his community apparently was of value to Bar Ṣalībī’s polemics, for this is
what one reads in his commentary: “Your own prophet testifies that (Muslims)
are few in the world. Christians, however, are numerous and this is why they
are strong.”46
Bar
Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 135, tr. p.
130.
With the words “Prayer of the Ṭayyōyē,” Bar Ṣalībī cites one final ḥadīth in chapter 30. This prayer is the well-known ‘Abrahamic prayer’ (al-ṣalāt al-Ibrāhīmiyya) reported in various ḥadīth collections, which serves as the closing supplication of the five-daily Muslim prayer:
| Disputation, XXX | Sunan Abū Dāwūd |
| Prayer of the Muslims: ‘O God, pray (ṣalō) for Muḥammad and the sons of his
people. And bless (barek) Muḥammad and the
sons of his people as you prayed for (ṣlayt),
blessed (barekt), and had mercy (w-ḥōnt) on Abraham and the sons of his
people. For he [i.e. Muḥammad] is praiseworthy and exalted (mshabḥō wa-mraymō)’.47
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 132, tr. p. 127. Mingana was unable to identify this passage, perhaps because he read ʿameh, ‘his people’ as ʿamhu, Arabic for ‘his paternal uncle’, see Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p. 45 (nr. 3) |
[…] So he [i.e. Muḥammad] said: ‘O God, send
your ṣalāt (ṣalli)
upon Muhammad, and the family of Muḥammad, as you have sent your ṣalāt (ṣallayta) upon
Abraham. And send your bless-ings (bārik)
upon Muhammad, and the family of Muḥammad, as you have sent your
blessings (bārakta) upon the family of
Abraham. Indeed, you are the praiseworthy (ḥamīd), the glorious (majīd)’.48
Sunan Abū Dāwūd, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 1, book 177/8, 976, p. 571-2 (translation slightly adapted). |
Though Bar Ṣalībī provides no comment for this quotation, his
motive for including it most likely is linked to an earlier debate on the
meaning of Christ’s prayer and the Muslim’s prayer for Muḥammad, in which
Bar Ṣalībī argued that “because you pray for your prophet, you seem to be
better than he is since you petition God to forgive him his
wrongdoing”.49
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 72, tr.
p. 65.
In addition to these three direct quotations of prophetic ḥadīth, Bar Ṣalībī also twice alludes to Muslim traditions on the collection of the Qurʾān. In chapter 23, in response to the Muslim critique that the Gospels are unreliable since they were written by the apostles and not by Christ himself, Bar Ṣalībī retorts by arguing that such a critique applies as well to the Qurʾān, which was not written down by Muḥammad himself, but was collected for the first time into a single codex by his cousin ʿAlī ibn Abū Ṭālib:
“Against them we say: Consider that when Muḥammad died,
the Qurʾān was neither written down. So his cousin ʿAlī ibn Abū Ṭālib –
others of them say: ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān – swore that he would not put on the
cloak (marṭūṭō) until their scripture was collected
and its parts joined together. For they were scattered here and there among
various individuals during the life of Muḥammad. So ʿAlī collected it and
made it intopb. 374 a single codex (ktōbō), and he called it
‘Qurʾān’ because he joined, that is, bound together (aqrana awkīt dabaq) (the fragments). Therefore ‘Qurʾān’ means:
‘volume and collection of disparate fragments’.50
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 98, tr p. 90-1. Amar misread the
part on the swearing, reading it as though ʿAlī swore that ʿUthmān
would not put on the cloak. Note that Bar Ṣalībī implies that the
term ‘Qurʾān’ is etymologically derived from the Arabic verb aqrana, ‘to join together, to combine’, from
the root q-r-n, rather than from the root q-r-ء, ‘to read, to
recite’, which is the standard explanation. Though Bar Ṣalībī’s take
on it is manifestly polemical, this alternative etymology is not as
“fanciful” as Amar suggested, for the root q-r-n is discussed by Arab lexicographers among the
possible meaning of ‘Qurʾān’, see Anne-Sylvie Boisliveau, Le Coran par lui-même: Vocabulaire et
argumentation du discours coranique autoréférentiel
(Leiden: Brill, 2014), p. 41-3.
Although the standard Muslim account ascribes the first collection of the Qurʾān to the initiative of Caliph Abū Bakr, several traditions recorded in both Sunnī and Shīʿī sources indeed contain reports that it was ʿAlī who first collected the Qurʾān after Muḥammad’s death. Interestingly enough, such reports also mention ʿAlī’s act of swearing not to put on the cloak, that is, not to leave the house, until the Qurʾān was fully collected. For instance:
“ʿAbd Khayr reported from ʿAlī that when he saw people in
despair and frustration at the death of the Prophet, he swore that he would
not wear his cloak on his back until he had collected the Qurʾān. Then he
sat in his house and collected the Qurʾān. So it was the first muṣḥaf in which the Qurʾān had been collected –
collected from his heart and this [muṣḥaf] is with
the descendants of Jaʿfar.51
Quoted in Shehzad Saleem, Collection of the Qurʾān: A Critical and Historical Study of
Al-Farāhī’s View (PhD diss., University of Wales Lampeter,
2010), p. 239. For the narratives of ʿAlī’s collection of the
Qurʾān, see ibid., p. 236-279; Seyfeddin
Kara, “The Suppression of ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib’s Codex: Study of the
Traditions on the Earliest Copy of the Qurʾān,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 75/2
(2016): 267-289.
Bar Ṣalībī also remarks that Muslims differ on who collected
the Qurʾān for the first time: was it ʿAlī ibn Abū Ṭālib, or as “others of
them say” ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān? This ambiguity is also reflected in Islamic
sources, although there not only a difference is to be noted on whether the
first collection of the Qurʾān was made by ʿAlī or ʿUthmān, but “each of the
first four caliphs is reported to have been the first person to collect the
Ḳurʾān [sic].”52
Welch, “Ḳurʾān,” EI2 5 (1986), p. 405. See
also John Burton, The Collection of the
Qurʾān (Cambrigde: Cambridge University Press, 1977), p.
138-159.
According to the most widespread Sunnī account, the final consonantal text was established during the reign of Caliph ʿUthmān who was confronted with the need of uniting the Muslim community around one unified, official text. The Caliph obtained the Qurʾānic collection commissioned by Abū Bakr now in the possession of ḥafṢa, and appointed a commission to copy it into several volumes which then were sent to the main cities of the empire. Due to ʿUthmān’s initiative in the establishment of an official, unified text, it came to be called al-muṣḥaf al-ʿUthmānī, ‘the ʿUthmānic Codex’. Bar Ṣalībī also seems to know of this subsequent stage of the Qurʾān’s textual history. To refute the Muslim claim that the revelation of the Qurʾān is similar to that of the Law and the Gospel, Bar Ṣalībī points out that, unlike Moses’ writing of the Law and the apostles’ writing of the Gospel, Muḥammad did not write down the Qurʾān himself, but ʿUthmān did it, which is why the book is called the ʿUthmānic Codex (ktōbōʿUthmānī):
“As for you, from where was the scripture revealed to
your prophet, although he [i.e. Muḥammad] died without writing (it)? Abū
Bakr ruled after him and did not write anything down, neither did ʿUmar
write the scripture. ʿUthmān collected (kanesh) your
scripture which had been collected by your elders (sōbē) and he made them swear to say whatever they heard from thepb. 376
prophet. He wrote this down, and it was called ‘the ʿUthmānic Codex’ (ktōbōʿUthmānī).53
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103.
Note Bar Ṣalībī’s use of the nisba adjective
ʿUthmānī.
The oldest manuscript has also here preserved an additional
sentence, in which reference is made to other Muslim works narrating the
Qurʾān’s textual history: “The Muslims say they have two other books [in
which] the story of the codices is written (ŌmrīnṬayyōyē d-īt l-hūn trēn ktōbē ḥrōnē. Ktīb sharbō
da-ktōbē).”54
Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f.
271b.
As the Qurʾān narrates the lives and deeds of the prophets
before Muḥammad only in a very cursory manner, Muslim commentators soon
began to reconstruct the narratives by drawing on Jewish and Christian
traditions, the so-called Isrāʾīliyyāt,55
On this term, see
Roberto Tottoli, “Origin and Use of the Term
Isrāʾīliyyāt in Muslim Literature,” Arabica
46 (1999): 193-209.
On this genre in general, see
Tilman Nagel, Die Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ. Ein Beitrag
zur Arabischen Literaturgeschichte (PhD diss., University
of Bonn, 1967); Roberto Tottoli, Biblical Prophets
in the Qurʾan and Muslim Literature, Routledge Studies in
the Qur'an (London/New York: Routledge, 2001).
In the context of the Adam narratives of chapter 26, Bar Ṣalībī quotes a peculiar account of Adam’s creation accordingpb. 377 to which he would have laid soulless on the earth for forty years. A very similar tradition was already reported by al-Ṭabarī (d. 923) in both his Tafsīr and History:
| Disputation, XXVI | Ṭabarī, Tafsīr/Taʾrīkh |
| Adam was formed and lay on the earth for forty
years without a soul. The angels passed by him and saw him.57
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 115, tr. p. 108. Note that the mention of the angels’ fear is absent from Bar Ṣalībī’s version, possibly because it was irrelevant to the point he seeks to make. |
So God shaped Adam into a human being, and he
remained a figure of clay for forty years, corresponding to the day
of Friday. The angels passed by him and were seized with fear by
what they saw, and Iblīs felt fear most.58
al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 459; Franz Rosenthal, The History of al-Tabari, Vol. 1: General Introduction and From the Creation to the Flood (Albany: Suny Press, 1989), p. 262. On the proces of the creation of Adam, see Cornelia Schöck, Adam im Islam. Ein Beitrag zur Ideengeschichte der Sunna (Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 1993), p. 74-8. This aspect of the creation of Adam was not discussed in Kisters’ study of Adamic legends in Islam, see M. J. Kister, “Ādam: A Study of Some Legends in Tafsīr and Ḥadīṯ Literature,” Israel Oriental Studies 13 (1993): 113-74. |
The idea behind this waiting period appears to be that a
certain time was needed for Adam’s clay body to dry before God could breathe
a soul into it.59
Schöck, Adam im Islam, p. 75.
Although scripture says that Adam was
created on the sixth day (cf. Gn 1:26-31), this scripture says that Adam
was formed and was lying without a soul in the dust of the earth for
forty years!60
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs,
ed. p. 116, tr. p. 109.
In chapter 27 on Noah and the flood, Bar Ṣalībī at one point
interrupts the flow of Qurʾānic verses with a lengthy report on a giant
named Og, son of ʿAnaq (ʿAwg/ʿŪg barpb. 378 ʿAnaq), said to
have survived the flood and who was later killed by Moses. The purpose of
this report, as his comment shows, is clearly to ridicule the silly stories
given credence by Muslims.61
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs,
ed. p. 119, tr. p. 112: “Observe that also this story is
unbelievable, dull, and very foolish”.
(God) did not set apart men, except Noah and those who were with him in the ark, and Og, son of ʿAnaq, as the readers of the scriptures (qōryay ktōbē) say. Og was the son of Sayhan and his mother ʿAnaq, and Og was a giant. As he was created by God, his stature was so great in creation that no one was able to describe it. And he was an enemy of the Muslims (bʿeldbōbō d-mashlmōnē) and those who are like them. His mother, ʿAnaq, was a woman of the daughters of Adam, and, as they say, she was beautiful to behold. But the readers of the scriptures say that at his birth he was already huge, in a way that is impossible to relate. On the waist of the giant there was a belt, and he used to stretch out his hand into the sea to take hold of a big fish from the bottom of the sea and he would hold it up to the sun to roast and eat it. He lived for 3600 years. He was born in the days of Adam, and lived until (the time of) Moses who killed him.
” “They say that he was killed as such: The giant looked
from a distance upon the Children of Israel (bnay
Īsrōʾīl) as they were praying in their camp, and determined that
the circumference of the camp was about two hours away. So the giant
approached a big mountain and broke off a rock as big as the circumference
of the camp. He put it above his head intending to hurl it on them to kill
them then and there. But immediately, God sent a common bird, a hoopoe, to
show Hispb. 379 power to His servant. And it took hold of a palm branch and a rock
the size of the head of the giant. And when the hoopoe pierced the rock, it
fell on the giant’s neck who collapsed to the ground.62
Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 118-119, tr. p.
111-2.
In the Old Testament, Og is only scantly mentioned as the
Amorite king of Bashan, a last descendant of a race of giants who was
defeated by Moses (cf. Nu 21:33-35; Dt 1:4; 3:11; 4:47). In early rabbinic
writings, these disparate verses gave rise to legendary elaborations which
later found their way to Muslim sources.63
B. Heller and S.M. Wasserstrom, “Ūdj,” EI2 10
(2000): 777-8. See also Admiel Kosman, “The Story of a Giant Story:
The Winding Way of Og King of Bashan in the Jewish Haggadic
Tradition,” Hebrew Union College
Annual 73 (2002): 157-190; Ján Pauliny, “ʿŪg ibn
ʿAnāq, ein sagenhafter Riese: Untersuchungen zu den islamischen
Riesengeschichten,” Craecolatina et Orientalia
5 (1973): 249-268.
Gutmann remarks
that Og, who was among the earliest biblical figures depicted in
Islamic art, fascinated Muslims “as he symbolized the accursed, evil
infidel who is vanquished by such true believers as Moses”, see
Joseph Gutmann, “More about the Giant Og in Islamic Art,” Bulletin of the Asia Institute 3 (1989):
107-114, p. 111.
Indeed, very similar narratives, including specific details
are reported in popular works of Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ
such as those by al-Thaʿlabī and al-Kisāʿī’.65
al-Thaʿlabī, Arāʾis al-majālis fī qiṣas al-anbiyāʾ, tr. Brinner, p.
99-100, 399-403; al-Kisāʾī, Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyā,
ed. Eisenberg p. 233-5, tr. Thackston, p. 251-3.
Joseph Gutmann and
Vera B. Moreen “The Combat between Moses and Og in Muslim
Miniatures,” Bulletin of the Asia Institute 1
(1987): 111-21. On the important place of the story of Og in Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ manuscripts from the
sixteenth century, see Naʿama Brosh and Rachel Milstein, Biblical Stories in
Islamic Painting (Jerusalem: Israel Museum, 1991), p.
39-40, 97-9; Rachel Milstein, Karin Rührdanz, and Barbara Schmitz,
Stories of the Prophets: Illustrated
Manuscripts of Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ (California: Mazda
Publishers, 1999), p. 131, 191.
Image: Ms.
Walters 659, f. 143b67
Ms. Walters 659, f. 143b,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Muhammad_ibn_Muhammad_Shakir_Ruzmah-%27i_Nathani__The
_Demon_%27Uj_ibn_%27Unuq_Carries_a_Mountain_with_which_to_Kill_Moses_and_His_Men_-_Walters_W659143B_-_Full_Page.jpg
Concluding Remarks
Almost a century after Mingana’s paper on the Disputation Against the Arabs, a new start was made in the present article in tracing the potential Islamic sources Bar Ṣalībī relied upon in composing the work. Mingana’s swift claim that Bar Ṣalībī’s knowledge of Islamic works was “extremely meagre” has proven to be ‘extremely’ inaccurate, not only because it rests on a flawed textual basis, but also because it combines with a highly selective reading of the text. The fact that little of the material discussed above is paralleled in other known Syriac (or Christian Arabic) texts leads one to suspect very strongly that Bar Ṣalībī was drawing directly on Islamic sources, incorporating material as he saw fit to his apologetic and polemic purposes at hand.
However, one should not fall in the opposite extreme of saying that his knowledge of Islamic sources was ‘extremely rich’. Given the fact that one finds in many Islamic works material on Muḥammad’s life, the sects of Islam, tafsīr, the ḥadīth, and the stories of the prophets, a limited number of Vorlagen could already suffice to account for all the material under review. The specificity of the material of the heresiography and Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ genres may warrant first and foremost further exploration along these lines. Particularly the prospects of a reliance on a work of Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyāʾ seems promising, as the use of such a Vorlage not only could explain the origin of his legendary accounts on Adam’s creation and Og the giant, but potentially also account for his notices on Muḥammad’s life and Muslim exegesis as well as his direct citations of ḥadīth material. Even more fascinating – to go already one step further – it may possibly also go to some lengths in explaining where the thematically arranged collection of Qurʾānic excerpts included in mimrō III came from in the first place. All of this, however, is a subject for some other time.
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- Sourdel, Dominique, “Les classification des sects islamiques dans le Kitāb al-Milal d’al-Šahrastānī.” Studia Islamica 31 (1970): 239-247.
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- Teule, Herman, “Jacob bar Šakkō, the Book of Treasures and the Syrian Renaissance.” In Eastern Crossroads. Essays on Medieval Christian Legacy, Gorgias Eastern Christianity Studies 1, ed. J.-P. Monferrer-Sala. Piscataway, NJ: Georgias Press, 2007, 143-154.
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Footnotes
1 * This article presents some intermediary results of my current PhD project on the apologetic theology and sources of Dionysius Bar Ṣalībī’s Disputation Against the Arabs, particularly his use of the Qurʾān and other Islamic texts. I thank the FWO for generously supporting my research. I also wish to thank James E. Walters for his patience with me and for checking my English. Thus the thesis of Michael P. Penn, Envisioning Islam: Syriac Christianity and the Early Muslim World (Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015).
2 For overviews of the Syriac apologetic texts in response to Islam, see Sidney H. Griffith, “Disputes with Muslims in Syriac Christian Texts: From Patriarch John (d. 648) to Bar Hebraeus (d. 1286),” in Religionsgespräche im Mittelalter, Wolfenbütteler Mittelalter-Studien 4, ed. B. Lewis and F. Niewöhner (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1992), 251-273; id., Syriac Writers on Muslims and the Religious Challenge of Islam (Kottayam: SEERI, 1995); Barbara Roggema, “Pour une lecture des dialogues islamo-chrétiens en syriaque à la lumière des controverses internes à l’islam,” in Les controverses religieuses en syriaque, Études syriaques 13, ed. F. Ruani (Paris: Geuthner, 2016), 261-294. For early Muslim polemics against Christianity, see e.g. David Thomas, “Early Muslim Responses to Christianity,” in Christians at the Heart of Islamic Rule: Church Life and Scholarship in ʿAbbasid Iraq, The History of Christian-Muslim Relations 1, ed. D. Thomas (Leiden: Brill, 2003), 231-254.
3 A critical edition based on five manuscripts together with an English translation was published in 2005 by Joseph Amar, Dionysius Bar Ṣalībī: A Reponse to the Arabs, CSCO 614-615 (Leuven: Peeters, 2005). I have checked Amar’s edition against the oldest manuscript from the year 1207, Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160 (ff. 245a-278b). Amar’s translation is the basis for the citations occuring in this paper, but I regularly applied changes were deemed necessary. For Bar Ṣalībī’s bio-bibliography, see Stephan D. Ryan, Dionysius bar Salibi's Factual and Spiritual Commentary on Psalms 73-82, Cahiers de révue biblique 57 (Paris: J. Gabalda et Cie, 2004), p. 1-14. On the period of the ‘Syriac Renaissance’, see Herman Teule, “The Syriac Renaissance,” in The Syriac Renaissance, Eastern Christian Studies 9, ed. H. Teule et al. (Leuven: Peeters, 2010), 1-30. Other writers of this period engaged Islam as well in their theological writings, but none of them is credited for having composed a seperate work in response to Islam. Some studies on these author’s apologetics are Herman Teule, “Jacob bar Šakkō, the Book of Treasures and the Syrian Renaissance,” in Eastern Crossroads. Essays on Medieval Christian Legacy, Gorgias Eastern Christianity Studies 1, ed. J.-P. Monferrer-Sala (Piscataway, NJ: Georgias Press, 2007), 143-154; Salam Rassi, Justifying Christianity in the Islamic Middle Ages: The Apologetic Theology of ʿAbdīshōʿ bar Brīkhā (d. 1318) (PhD diss., University of Oxford, 2015); Bert Jacobs, “Unveiling Christ in the Islamicate World: Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī's Prophetology as a Model for Christian Apologetics in Gregory Bar ʿEbrōyō’s Treatise on the Incarnation,” Intellectual History of the Islamicate World 6/1&2 (2018), 187-216.
4 See my PhD dissertation for a discussion of the larger literary context. On the content and significance of the Disputation Against the Arabs, see also the overviews of Syriac apologetic texts in nr. 2, as well as Sidney H. Griffith, “Dionysius bar Ṣalībī on the Muslims,” in IV Symposium Syriacum: Literary Genres in Syriac Literature, Orientalia Christiana Analecta 229, ed. H. Drijvers et al. (Rome: Pontificium Institutum Studiorum Orientalium, 1987), p. 353-365; Herman Teule, “Dionysius Bar Ṣalibi,” Christian-Muslim Relations: A Bibliographical History 3 (Leiden: Brill, 2011), 665-70, p. 667-70.
5 Bar Ṣalībī provides two such testimony lists: in chapter 8 concerning the Trinity, and in chapter 19 for the Incarnation. Only the latter list was studied in Sebastian P. Brock, ”A Syriac Collection of Prophecies of the Pagan Philosophers,” Orientalia Lovaniensia Periodica 14 (1983): 203-246; id., “Some Syriac Excerpts from Greek Collections of Pagan Prophecies,” Vigilae Christianae 38 (1984): 77-90.
6 On early Christian approaches to the Qurʾān, see Mark Beaumont, “Early Christian Interpretation of the Qurʾān,” Transformation 22/4 (2005): 195-203; Sidney H. Griffith, “The Qurʾān in Arab Christian Texts; the Development of an Apologetical Argument: Abū Qurrah in the Maǧlis of al-Maʾmūn,” Parole de l’Orient 24 (1999): 203-233; id., “Christians and the Arabic Qurʾān: Prooftexting, Polemics, and Intertwined Scriptures,” Intellectual History of the Islamicate World 2 (2014): 243-266; Clare E. Wilde, Approaches to the Qur’an in Early Christian Arabic Texts (750CE-1258 CE) (Palo Alto, California: Academica Press, 2014).
7 See Martin Heimgartner, Timotheos I., Ostsyrischer Patriarch: Disputation mit dem Kalifen Al-Mahdī, CSCO 631-2 (Leuven: Peeters, 2011), tr., p. xxvii (nr. 105); Shabo Talay, “Aus dem polemischen Genre des Syrischen: Die luqbal-Schriften von Bar Ṣalībī und Bar Šūšan,” in Orientalia Christiana, Festschrift für Hubert Kaufhold zum 70. Geburtstag, ed. P. Bruns and H. O. Luthe(Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2013), 511-521, p. 517-8. On Bar Ṣalībī’s use of the now lost Chronicle of Dionysius of Tell-Maḥrē (d. 845) in the opening chapter of the Disputation, see Bert Jacobs, “Tentative Reconstruction of Dionyius of Tell-Maḥrē’s Account of the Rise of Islam through Three Dependant Texts,” forthcoming.
8 See Teule, “The Syriac Renaissance,” p. 23-8.
9 Alphonse Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation of the Ḳurʾan Exhibiting New Verses and Variants,” Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 9/1 (1925): 188-235; reprinted with minimal corrections and additions in Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1925, 3-50. The current paper cites from Mingana’s final version. Recently, Mingana’s study has been reprinted in a volume seeking to challenge the Qurʾān’s traditional status in Islam, Which Koran?: Variants, Manuscripts, Linguistics, ed. Ibn Warraq (Amherst, Prometheus Books, 2008; 2011). Mingana’s study and translation of the quotation section of mimrō III was based on a single manuscript, Mingana Syriac 89 (1715 AD). After completion of his study, he was able to compare this manuscript with Harvard Syriac 91 (1898 AD), the results of which he described in a supplementary note appended to the paper.
10 Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p. 29-30.
11 Gotthelf Bergsträβer, “Die Geschichte des Qurāntexts,” in T. Nöldeke, F. Schwally, G. Bergsträβer, and O. Pretzl, Geschichte des Qurāns, 3 vols. (Leipzig: Dieterich’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1909, 1919, 1938), Vol. 3, p. 100-2. For Nöldeke’s brief epistolary response from April 13, 1925, see ibid., p. 102 (nr. 1). Bergsträβer’s view that the variants presented by Mingana are unrelated to the non-canonical variants known from Muslim sources was endorsed by Arthur Jeffery, Materials for the History of the Text of the Qur’an: The Old Codices (Leiden: Brill, 1937), p. 14-15 (nr 1).
12 Griffith, Syriac Writers on Muslims, p. 25.
13 See my PhD for a full assessment of Mingana’s proposals.
14 Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p. 29-30: “[…] his own knowledge of Muslim religious and historical books seems to have been extremely meagre. […] Of the innumerable Muslim works of ḥadīth and history, preceding the twelfth century, the author had apparently heard only of the Maghāzi and the Mukhtāra (!), and even these he had not seen and read; he was aware of their existence only through hearsay: ‘the Muslims say that they have …’ A man of this calibre would hardly be able to translate the Ḳurʾān [sic] or to use the early works of tradition in a controversial work between Christians and Muslims.” (Mingana’s italics)
15 Ms. Mingana Syriac 89, f. 76a. This manuscript is nowadays easily consultable online, see http://vmr.bham.ac.uk/Collections/Mingana/ Syriac_89.
16 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111; tr. 103. Amar’s manuscripts include Harvard Syriac 91, the manuscript which Mingana later used for comparison in his supplementary notes.
17 Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 271a-b. Cf. Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103-4. Also the word yubōleh occuring at the end of this passage appears to be a better reading than yuqneh, ‘his image’, the reading attested in the manuscripts consulted by Amar.
18 See the works surveyed by F. Sezgin, Geschichte des arabischen Schrifttums, Vol. 1 (Leiden: Brill, 1967), 237-56, 275-302; and more generally M. Hinds, “Al-Maghāzī,” EI2 5 (1986): 1161-6.
19 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103-4. Amar misread several proper names at the beginning of this passage. The oldest manuscript has an additional sentence which adds a somewhat polemical twist to the narrative: “Muḥammad and his foster mother put him [the angel] down, as he [the angel] was about to choke him with the pen that wrote”, see Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 271b.
20 See e.g. Alfred Guillaume, The Life of Muḥmmad: A Translation of Ibn Isḥaq’s Sīrat rasūl Allāh (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982), p. 69-72 (on his birth, foster mother, and the washing of his heart by two men in white when he was an infant); p. 79 (Abū Ṭālib becomes Muḥammad’s guardian after the death of his grandfather); p. 104-106 (on the stones and trees greeting him and the first revelation he received, i.e. Q 96:1-5). Note the slight discrepancy that Abū Ṭālib became Muḥammad’s guardian after the death of his grandfather ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, not after the death of his father, as Bar Ṣalībī wrote.
21 See n. 7 for my forthcoming study on this chapter.
22 See Talay, “Aus dem polemischen Genre,” p. 516-7.
23 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 5-8, tr. p. 2-9. In his Arabic Chronicle, Bar ʿEbrōyō includes a similar but more elaborate account of early Islamic schisms, undoubtedly borrowed from (a) Muslim source(s), see Bar ʿEbrōyō, Taʾrīkh mukhtaṣar al-duwal, ed. Ṣalhānī, p. 164-7.
24 See the works cited in nr. 2 and 4.
25 Henri Laoust, “La classification des sectes dans le Farq d’al-Baghdādī,” Revue des Études Islamiques 29 (1961): 19-59; reprinted in Pluralismes dans l'islam (Paris, 1983), 135-75; id. “La classification des sects dans l’hérésiographie ashʿarite,” Arabic and Islamic Studies in Honor of Hamilton A. R. Gibb, ed. G. Makdisi (Leiden 1965), 377-86.; id., “L'hérésiographie musulmane sous les Abbassides,” Cahiers de civilisation médiévale 38 (1967), 157-178; Dominique Sourdel, “Les classification des sects islamiques dans le Kitāb al-Milal d’al-Šahrastānī,” Studia Islamica 31 (1970): 239-247; Claude Gilliot, “Islam, ‘sectes’ et groups d’opposition politico-religieux (VIIe-XIIe siècles),” Rives nord-méditerranéeennes 10 (2002): 1-13.
26 Josef van Ess, Der Eine und das Andere. Beobachtungen an islamischen haresiographischen Texten, 2 vols (Berlin/New York: De Gruyter, 2011), Vol. 1., p. 77.
27 Laoust, “L'hérésiographie musulmane sous les Abbassides,” p. 171.
28 Teule, “Dionysius Bar Ṣalibi,” p. 665. The Disputation as a whole may even be written in response to the Muslim destruction of Edessa. After having upheld the doctrines of the Trinitiy and Incarnation to his own satisfaction, Bar Ṣalībī somewhat triumphantically writes that, through his efforts, “the proclamation of Christianity has achieved victory over the people that has overpowered us because of our sins (ʿamō d-men ʿelat ḥṭōhayn etʿašan ʿlayn)”. This important allusion to the fall of Edessa was mistrans-lated by Amar, see Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 81, tr. p. 74.
29 Bar Ṣalībī may allude here to the fact that although Muslim exegetes usually interpret dhālika l-kitāb (Q 2:2) to mean ‘this book’, i.e. the Qurʾān, it literally says ‘that book’. This sentence was not included in Amar’s translation, though it is present in his edition.
30 My emendation.
31 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 112, tr. p. 104.
32 On the large spectrum of interpretations within Sunnī tafsīr, see Martin Nguyen, “Exegesis of the ḥurūf al-muqaṭṭaʿa: Polyvalency in Sunnī Traditions of Qur’ānic Interpretation,” Journal of Qurʾānic Studies 14/2 (2012): 1-28.
33 al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 210.
34 Ibid., p. 204-228.
35 al-Qurṭubī, al-Jāmiʿ li-aḥkām al-Qurʾān, ed. Beirut, p. 241. See Daniel A. Madigan, “Preserved Tablet,” EQ 4 (2004): 261-3.
36 Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 271b: ܗܠܝܢ ܕܬ̇ܢܐ ܗܪܟܐ ܗܠܝܢ ܕܝܠܢ ܟܖ̈ܝܣܛܝܢܐ ܐܡܪ݂.
37 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. 110, tr. p. 103.
38 Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 272b. The manuscripts consulted by Amar read ‘to add’ in the singular (awsef) which is taken to mean that it is the Qurʾān that adds four angels, see Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. 113, tr. p. 106. Mingana derived a rather bizarre argument against Bar Ṣalībī’s translatorship from this comment, see Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p. 6-7.
39 Stephen R. Burge, Angels in Islam: Jalāl al-Dīn al-Suyūtī's al-Ḥabāʾik fī akhbār al-malāʾik, Culture and Civilization in the Middle East 31 (Oxon: Routledge, 2012), p. 43-4.
40 al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 229; Burge, Angels in Islam, p. 146.
41 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 110, tr. p. 102.
42 Sunan Abū Dāwūd, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 5, book 42, 4700, p. 213 (translation slightly adapted). For other versions, see ‘creation’ in A. J. Wensinck, A Handbook of Early Mohammadan Tradition (Leiden: Brill, 1927), p. 49.
43 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 113, tr. p. 105. Note Bar Ṣalībī’s use of the Arabic term for pen, qalam.
44 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 128, tr. p. 122.
45 Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 8, book 81, 6529, p. 287 (translation slightly adapted).
46 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 135, tr. p. 130.
47 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 132, tr. p. 127. Mingana was unable to identify this passage, perhaps because he read ʿameh, ‘his people’ as ʿamhu, Arabic for ‘his paternal uncle’, see Mingana, “An Ancient Syriac Translation,” p. 45 (nr. 3)
48 Sunan Abū Dāwūd, ed. Dār al-salām, Vol. 1, book 177/8, 976, p. 571-2 (translation slightly adapted).
49 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 72, tr. p. 65.
50 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 98, tr p. 90-1. Amar misread the part on the swearing, reading it as though ʿAlī swore that ʿUthmān would not put on the cloak. Note that Bar Ṣalībī implies that the term ‘Qurʾān’ is etymologically derived from the Arabic verb aqrana, ‘to join together, to combine’, from the root q-r-n, rather than from the root q-r-ء, ‘to read, to recite’, which is the standard explanation. Though Bar Ṣalībī’s take on it is manifestly polemical, this alternative etymology is not as “fanciful” as Amar suggested, for the root q-r-n is discussed by Arab lexicographers among the possible meaning of ‘Qurʾān’, see Anne-Sylvie Boisliveau, Le Coran par lui-même: Vocabulaire et argumentation du discours coranique autoréférentiel (Leiden: Brill, 2014), p. 41-3.
51 Quoted in Shehzad Saleem, Collection of the Qurʾān: A Critical and Historical Study of Al-Farāhī’s View (PhD diss., University of Wales Lampeter, 2010), p. 239. For the narratives of ʿAlī’s collection of the Qurʾān, see ibid., p. 236-279; Seyfeddin Kara, “The Suppression of ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib’s Codex: Study of the Traditions on the Earliest Copy of the Qurʾān,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 75/2 (2016): 267-289.
52 Welch, “Ḳurʾān,” EI2 5 (1986), p. 405. See also John Burton, The Collection of the Qurʾān (Cambrigde: Cambridge University Press, 1977), p. 138-159.
53 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 111, tr. p. 103. Note Bar Ṣalībī’s use of the nisba adjective ʿUthmānī.
54 Ms. Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate 160, f. 271b.
55 On this term, see Roberto Tottoli, “Origin and Use of the Term Isrāʾīliyyāt in Muslim Literature,” Arabica 46 (1999): 193-209.
56 On this genre in general, see Tilman Nagel, Die Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ. Ein Beitrag zur Arabischen Literaturgeschichte (PhD diss., University of Bonn, 1967); Roberto Tottoli, Biblical Prophets in the Qurʾan and Muslim Literature, Routledge Studies in the Qur'an (London/New York: Routledge, 2001).
57 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 115, tr. p. 108. Note that the mention of the angels’ fear is absent from Bar Ṣalībī’s version, possibly because it was irrelevant to the point he seeks to make.
58 al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān ʿan taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, ed. Cairo, p. 459; Franz Rosenthal, The History of al-Tabari, Vol. 1: General Introduction and From the Creation to the Flood (Albany: Suny Press, 1989), p. 262. On the proces of the creation of Adam, see Cornelia Schöck, Adam im Islam. Ein Beitrag zur Ideengeschichte der Sunna (Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 1993), p. 74-8. This aspect of the creation of Adam was not discussed in Kisters’ study of Adamic legends in Islam, see M. J. Kister, “Ādam: A Study of Some Legends in Tafsīr and Ḥadīṯ Literature,” Israel Oriental Studies 13 (1993): 113-74.
59 Schöck, Adam im Islam, p. 75.
60 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 116, tr. p. 109.
61 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 119, tr. p. 112: “Observe that also this story is unbelievable, dull, and very foolish”.
62 Bar Ṣalībī, Against the Arabs, ed. p. 118-119, tr. p. 111-2.
63 B. Heller and S.M. Wasserstrom, “Ūdj,” EI2 10 (2000): 777-8. See also Admiel Kosman, “The Story of a Giant Story: The Winding Way of Og King of Bashan in the Jewish Haggadic Tradition,” Hebrew Union College Annual 73 (2002): 157-190; Ján Pauliny, “ʿŪg ibn ʿAnāq, ein sagenhafter Riese: Untersuchungen zu den islamischen Riesengeschichten,” Craecolatina et Orientalia 5 (1973): 249-268.
64 Gutmann remarks that Og, who was among the earliest biblical figures depicted in Islamic art, fascinated Muslims “as he symbolized the accursed, evil infidel who is vanquished by such true believers as Moses”, see Joseph Gutmann, “More about the Giant Og in Islamic Art,” Bulletin of the Asia Institute 3 (1989): 107-114, p. 111.
65 al-Thaʿlabī, Arāʾis al-majālis fī qiṣas al-anbiyāʾ, tr. Brinner, p. 99-100, 399-403; al-Kisāʾī, Qiṣaṣ al-anbiyā, ed. Eisenberg p. 233-5, tr. Thackston, p. 251-3.
66 Joseph Gutmann and Vera B. Moreen “The Combat between Moses and Og in Muslim Miniatures,” Bulletin of the Asia Institute 1 (1987): 111-21. On the important place of the story of Og in Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ manuscripts from the sixteenth century, see Naʿama Brosh and Rachel Milstein, Biblical Stories in Islamic Painting (Jerusalem: Israel Museum, 1991), p. 39-40, 97-9; Rachel Milstein, Karin Rührdanz, and Barbara Schmitz, Stories of the Prophets: Illustrated Manuscripts of Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ (California: Mazda Publishers, 1999), p. 131, 191.
67 Ms. Walters 659, f. 143b, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ File:Muhammad_ibn_Muhammad_Shakir_Ruzmah-%27i_Nathani__The _Demon_%27Uj_ibn_%27Unuq_Carries_a_Mountain_with_which_to_Kill_Moses_and_His_Men_-_Walters_W659143B_-_Full_Page.jpg
