#5 Petrus in Leiden

(St. Peter's Confessions: a Dan-Brown type novel about Leiden’s connection with one of Christianity’s founders – light summer reading involving Leiden’s major festival, scholars and students, biblical interpretation, Aramaic and Greek, early Christian history and sixteenth-century Leiden history.) Om niet de indruk te wekken me zelfs in de zomervakantie alleen maar met het serieuzere werk bezig… Continue reading #5 Petrus in Leiden

#4 Vernacular religion in the Middle East

James Grehan, Twilight of the Saints: Everyday Religion in Ottoman Syria and Palestine (OUP 2014) Searching out the #baraka of the holy man or woman, visiting their tombs to pray for your relatives, sleeping overnight in a sanctuary to seek the blessing of motherhood, wearing a talisman with sacred scripture, gathering water from a sacred well… Continue reading #4 Vernacular religion in the Middle East

#3 Christians in the Ottoman Empire Revisited (Krimsti & Çolak)

Recently two well-researched additions to Ottoman Studies landed on my desk, both touching upon the position of Christians and other non-Muslim minorities, both concerning hot topics of current research: Feras Krimsti’s Die Unruhen von 1850 in Aleppo: Gewalt im urbanen Raum (2014) about nineteenth-century violence directed at Christians and Hasan Çolak’s The Orthodox Church in… Continue reading #3 Christians in the Ottoman Empire Revisited (Krimsti & Çolak)