In the book, Discovering the Global Past, Merry Wiesner describes the Crusades from both the Muslim and Catholic perspective. For both religious groups, Wiesner alludes to the fact that people’s biases and the creation of “the other” had shaped negative views of the two groups. In this paper, I will argue how both the Catholic’s and Muslims’ had an inaccurate and partisan view of each other, which led to the creation of “othering”. I will do this by briefly showing the biases, as narrated by Malcolm Barber. I will then utilize documents from the chapter, “Two Faces of Holy War” from Merry Wiesner’s text, to show examples of how bias clouded the Muslims’ view of Catholic’s, and the Catholics’ view of…
The fourteenth century was a era of crisis. A “little ice” age led to famine, but a greater disaster followed:…
Throughout history, there has repeatedly been tension among religious groups whose beliefs and customs diverge with one another. Religious tensions in the past have resulted in many marked events, such as The Crusades, The Inquisition, and 9/11, all of which were provoked by the disrespect people had toward each other's religions beliefs . For many people, their religion acts as a moral compass for behavior and conduct in life and when violent wars occur because of clashing religious views, the purpose of religion may seem counterintuitive. When contrasting beliefs from different religions affect how people act toward each other, it becomes apparent that pride is the primary cause of the tension.…
The Wars of Religion in the 17th and 18th centuries were some of the bloodiest conflicts of all of European history before the World Wars. They spanned the entire continent, involved nearly every member of society, and resulted in the deaths of millions. Reactions to these wars varied– some were in favour, some were opposed. However, despite the fact that people’s reactions deviated wildly, the evidence shows that many rulers had a similar attitude towards the Wars of Religion, and manipulated them for the benefit of themselves or their country.…
In the ancient world, religious tolerance was mainly in the context of imperial states using it as a political or strategic tactic to hold power within an imperial state ; or as part of religious teachings that forbade the forced conversions of others. In modern times, many sovereign Western countries,including the U.S, have implemented religious tolerance with the aim of multiculturalism and have even codified it. In the Persian context, it was used as a political strategy to help advance his conquests by giving an image of tolerance and vibrancy. In the Ottoman context, forced conversions weren’t practiced because the Quran forbid it. By contrast, the U.S and many other sovereign Western countries have codified this policy for the goal of…
2. Irreconcilable Differences? A Learning Resource for Jews and Christians. The Institute for Christian and Jewish Studies. February 2001. Http://www.icjs.org/what/njsp/kat…
The legacy of the Middle Ages, while being debatable, is most closely tied to that of an “Age of Faith” due to the Roman Catholic Church’s power over most aspects of medieval culture. From the 5th to the 15th century, Christianity reigned over any other structures that had power over the Medieval Era, allowing the church to have the most lasting impact on the age and most other time periods that followed. The church was able to outlast any dark or golden age, overpower the feudal system, and gain the complete and utter faith of most people in Europe, giving the age its ultimate title as one of faith.…
The author tells the tale of the murder of a child, for whom a Jewish butcher is blamed, and subsequently causes violence against all Jewish residents in the town. The Jewish butcher was accused of the murder not because of the overwhelming evidence against him, but simply because the Christians of that town were made to believe, generation after generation, that Jews performed ritual murders, despite the fact that they were living in a time when democracy was progressing and rights of citizens were expanding, including those of Jews, and despite the fact that 19th century works on ritual murder charges showed them to have been a hoax from the start. The town had one of the most integrated Jewish minorities in all of Europe. Yet, the taunts and threats that started small with nightly demonstrations by teenage boys, quickly graduated to accusations requiring local government issuances of public warnings against the threats. Ultimately, the bigotry was so engrained in their belief, that neighbor turned against neighbor, and riots and violence followed. The book reflects that throughout the ages, anti-Semites have used these types of accusations to justify their behavior toward Jews and to substantiate their prejudices against them.…
While violence against Christians has been increasing worldwide, and while Christians in the East are becoming "an endangered species," according to author William Dalrymple, attention to the crisis in the broadsheets and broadcasts of the West is "occasional and momentary" at best. No doubt this reticence must in part have to do with the West's tendency to quarantine religion out of public discourse and concern.…
The people of Omelas justify the misery and torture of the one child, “they all understand that their happiness, the beauty of their city, the tenderness of their friendships, the health of their children, the wisdom of their scholars, the skill of their makers, even the abundance of their harvests and the kindly weather of their skies, depend wholly on this child’s abominable misery” (Le Guin, 5). They believe that it is a necessary evil that must exist in order for them to live their luxurious and beautiful lives. Their toleration turns from ignorance to unlawful neglect. Jovan Babic critics this point of view in his journal on ethics and his critique of the topic of toleration, “Tolerance involves absorbing the attitude that others may have and act upon a definition of “the Good” which is different from our own.” (227). According to Jovan Babic’s definition of tolerance, the people of Omelas do not possess true toleration with regards to the misery of the young child, but what do they possess? Jovan Babic answers this question as well, “it is quite easy to substitute for genuine toleration…
Societies that discriminate against the weak are unjust. In the novel Of Mice And Men by John Steinbeck, many characters are unfairly oppressed. Society treats Curley 's Wife poorly because she is a woman, Crooks because he is black and Lennie because he is disabled. In the end, intolerance leads to tragedy for each one of them.…
-Sometimes women peasants lived a more comfortable life than higher queens etc. because their lives were more stable with their partner…
Primarily an interpretation based on violence as a sociopolitical and socioreligious tool employed by the local peasantry against power or perceived un-justice-ness against the “other”, minorities, the nobility and clergy. With argument support from on Nirenberg’s Communities of violence: Persecution of Minorities in the Middle Ages and Bisson’s ‘Feudal Revolution’ the organization and use of violence both during and post and precluding periods will be analyzed for to clarify violence’s distinct social, political, and religious purpose during the medieval period. With contextual support from The Song of the Cathar Wars, to differentiate violence against heretics and deviance within Christendom versus the persecution of the religious minorities and…
The life of a peasant was a hard one. They had to work long hours in their lords fields in return for a small cottage and strip of land near the manor house. Their health was poor due to bad diets and unhygienic living conditions. Most peasants did not live past the age of thirty. Peasants had very little freedoms. If they were born a peasant, they stayed tied to the land until they died.…
For more than twelve centuries, there has been hostile conflict between the Orthodox and Catholic churches ("The Filioque: A Church Dividing Issue?: An Agreed Statement”). Their conflict led to the violent crusades and an extensive division among the two (Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis & Anthony Esler, p. 673). Leadership, culture, language, and differences in the practice of Christianity are large contributors to the continuing discord (Davies). Although Orthodox beliefs are derived from Catholic beliefs, there are too many discrepancies in practices between the two that won’t be able to be resolved (Davies). Early leaders of the Byzantine Empire and Roman Catholic Church noticed the first deviation between the two types of Christianity were practices…