Prophet of Reason: Science, Religion and the Origins of the Modern Middle East
English
By (author): Peter Hill
'An outstanding intellectual biography.' Eugene Rogan
In 1813, high in the Lebanese mountains, a thirteen-year-old boy watches a solar eclipse. Will it foretell a war, a plague, the death of a prince? Mikhail Mishaqas lifelong search for truth starts here. Soon hes reading Newtonian science and the radical ideas of Voltaire and Volney: he loses his religion, turning away from the Catholic Church. Thirty years later, as civil war rages in Syria, he finds a new faith Evangelical Protestantism. His obstinate polemics scandalise his community. Then, in 1860, Mishaqa barely escapes death in the most notorious event in Damascus: a massacre of several thousand Christians. We are presented with a paradox: rational secularism and violent religious sectarianism grew up together.
By tracing Mishaqas life through this tumultuous era, when empires jostled for control, Peter Hill answers the question: What did people in the Middle East actually believe? Its a world where one man could be a Jew, an Orthodox Christian and a Sunni Muslim in turn, and a German missionary might walk naked in the streets of Valletta.
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