Medieval Heresies
Jews, Christians, and Muslims in the Middle Ages were divided in manyways. But one thing they shared in common was the fear that God wasoffended by wrong belief.Medieval Heresies: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam isthe first comparative survey of heresy and its response throughout themedieval world. Spanning England to Persia, it examines heresy, error,and religious dissent – and efforts to end them through correction, persua-sion, or punishment – among Latin Christians, Greek Christians, Jews, andMuslims. With a lively narrative that begins in the late fourth century andends in the early sixteenth century, Medieval Heresies is an unprecedentedhistory of how the three great monotheistic religions of the Middle Agesresembled, differed from, and even interrelated with each other in definingheresy and orthodoxy.
christine caldwell ames is Associate Professor of History at theUniversity of South Carolina. She is the author of Righteous Persecution:Inquisition, Dominicans, and Christianity in the Middle Ages.
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Cambridge Medieval Textbooks
This is a series of introductions to important topics in medieval history aimedprimarily at advanced students and faculty, and is designed to complement themonograph series Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought. It includesboth chronological and thematic approaches and addresses both British andEuropean topics.
For a list of titles in the series, see www.cambridge.org/medievaltextbooks
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•
MEDIEVAL HERESIES:CHRISTIANITY, JUDAISM,
AND ISLAM•
CHRISTINE CALDWELL AMESUniversity of South Carolina
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University Printing House, Cambridge cb2 8bs, United Kingdom
Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge.
It furthers the University’s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit ofeducation, learning and research at the highest international levels of excellence.
www.cambridge.orgInformation on this title: www.cambridge.org/9781107023369
© Christine Caldwell Ames 2015
This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exceptionand to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,no reproduction of any part may take place without the written
permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published 2015
Printed in the United Kingdom by Clays, St Ives plc
A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication dataAmes, Christine Caldwell.
Medieval heresies : Christianity, Judaism, and Islam / Christine Caldwell Ames.pages cm. – (Cambridge medieval textbooks)
isbn 978-1-107-02336-9 (hardback)1. Christian heresies – History – Middle Ages, 600-1500.
2. Jewish heresies – History – To 1500. 3. Islamicheresies – History – To 1500. 4. Christianity and other religions. I. Title.
bt1319.a46 2015206′.5–dc232014042933
isbn 978-1-107-02336-9 Hardbackisbn 978-1-107-60701-9 Paperback
Additional resources for this publication at www.cambridge.org/medievalheresies
Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy ofURLs for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication,
and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain,accurate or appropriate.
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To my children
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CONTENTS
•
List of figures page ixList of maps xiAcknowledgments xiiNote on texts and translations xiv
Introduction: “My community will be divided”:heresy in the medieval world 1Truly medieval heresies 2
What is heresy? 6
Comparing medieval heresies 15
Heresy in this book 25
1 Peoples of the Book (380–661) 28Heresy and territory 31
Defining and redefining heresy in a changing Roman Empire 32
Repressing Christian heresy: the foundations 43
Arians and Nicenes in the post-Roman West 53
Heresy and religious change in the East 65
Authority and texts in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam 68
Conclusion: let there be unity 77
2 Triumphs of orthodoxy (661–1031) 79Religious authority in early-medieval Islam 81
Repressing heresy in the Muslim East 86
Heresy in Muslim al-Andalus 97
The Karaites 103
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Heresy and response in the Christian East 112
The “reappearance” of heresy in the Latin West 127
Conclusion: an early-medieval persecuting society? 135
3 The perfect hatred (1031–1209) 137Conflict, heresy, and religious otherness in the eleventh
and twelfth centuries 139
Heresy and religious movements in the Latin West 146
Heresy, spirituality, and rebellion in the Muslim world 163
Inventing orthodoxy and punishing heresy in high-medievalJudaism 174
Byzantine heresy in the high Middle Ages 187
Philosophy, theology, and heresy 196
Conclusion: hating those who hate you 201
4 Cinders and ashes (1209–1328) 203God’s judgment 207
Poverty and apocalypticism 220
Greeks and Latins, brothers and heretics 228
Jews as heresy accusers 232
Jews as Christian heretics 237
Aristotle, Greek philosophy, and heresy 242
Two heretics (d. 1328) 250
Conclusion: eye of the beholder 261
5 Purity and peoples (1328–1510) 263Heresy, nation, and state in the late Middle Ages 267
Blood, baptism, and heresy 270
Orthodoxy and heresy in late-medieval Judaism 278
Language, nation, and heresy 286
Eastern Christianity: heresy and the end of the state 307
Conclusion: no longer Jew or Greek 320
Epilogue 323
For further reading 330Glossary 335Index 339
viii Contents
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FIGURES
•
1 Constantine the Great at the Council of Nicaea in ad 325,ordering the burning of Arian books. Canon of the Councils,ninth century. Biblioteca Capitolare Vercelli (Photo credit:Gianni Dagli Orti/The Art Archive at Art Resource, NY) page 14
2 Disputation between Augustine of Hippo and Faustus.School of Mont Saint Michel. French, early thirteenth century.Bibliothèque Municipale, Avranches, MS 90, f. 1v. (Photocredit: Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY) 50
3 The baptism of Christ by John the Baptist, with the river god ofJordan. Cupola mosaic, Baptistery of the Arians, Ravenna, builtby Theodoric before ad 526. (Photo credit: Alfredo DagliOrti/The Art Archive at Art Resource, NY) 55
4 Isaiah’s prophecy of Muhammad, from The Chronology ofAncient Nations by Al-Biruni, 1307. Edinburgh UniversityLibrary, Scotland. (Photo credit: The University ofEdinburgh/Bridgeman Images) 75
5 Execution of Al-Hallaj, from The Chronology of Ancient Nationsby Al-Biruni, 1307. Edinburgh University Library, Scotland.(Photo credit: The University of Edinburgh/BridgemanImages) 91
6 Carpet page from a Karaite Bible, British Library, London.(Photo credit: Bridgeman Images) 107
7 Patriarch Nicephorus of Constantinople and iconoclasts. TheTheodore Psalter/Studion Psalter of Theodore of Caesarea,Studios Monastery, Constantinople, 1066. (Photo credit:HIP/Art Resource, NY) 116
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8 Icon of the triumph of orthodoxy, Constantinople, c. 1400.(©The Trustees of the British Museum. All rights reserved) 117
9 Miniature from Maimonides,Mishneh Torah. SouthernEuropean, c. 1351. National and University Library, Jerusalem,Israel. (Photo credit: Bridgeman-Giraudon/Art Resource, NY) 182
10 Abbreviated Talmud of R. Asher ben Jehiel, c. 1250–1328.(Photo credit: Kharbine-Tapabor/The Art Archive at ArtResource, NY) 238
11 Amalric of Bène preaching, c. 1200 (1375–9). GrandesChroniques de France, in the collection of the BibliothèqueNationale, Paris. (Photo credit: HIP/Art Resource, NY) 246
12 Shah Ismail (1501–23) fighting Shaybani Khan. Period of AbbasII. Safavid mural in the Audience Hall, 1660s. Chihil Sutun(Pavilion of Forty Columns), Isfahan, Iran. (Photo credit:SEF/Art Resource, NY) 306
13 Palm Sunday procession in Moscow, April 8, 1498. Ivan III,Zoe Palaiologina, and Elena of Wallachia. Collection of theState History Museum, Moscow. (Photo credit: HIP/ArtResource, NY) 319
x List of figures
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MAPS
•
1 The Byzantine Empire page xv2 The Islamic Near East xvi3 Europe in the year 1000 xvii4 The Mediterranean world in the twelfth century xviii5 The later medieval world xix
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
•
While I am no Augustine, the Quodvultdeus of this project wasElizabeth Friend-Smith at Cambridge University Press. A compara-tive history of heresy in medieval Judaism, Christianity, and IslamwasLiz’s inspired idea, and I can only hope that this book reflects a bit ofwhat she first envisioned. I am enormously grateful to Liz for herinsights and patience throughout the process, to Valerie Appleby forshaping this into a book students might read, and to Rosalyn Scott forher cheerful assistance in all things.Colleagues and friends answered questions, read drafts, or other-
wise spurred me to think hard about heresy: Sean Anthony, PeterBiller, Paul Cobb, Jeremy Cohen, Andy Kelly, Cornelia Linde,Bob Moore, Ed Peters, Damian Smith, Sita Steckel, and DavidZbiral. I benefited enormously, as ever, from the bracing tonic ofconversations with Mark Gregory Pegg. It’s a particular pleasureto acknowledge the generous help of my new departmental colleaguesAndrew Berns and Matthew Melvin-Koushki. Thanks to the anon-ymous readers at Cambridge University Press. Several of my studentsread chapter drafts, and I’m grateful to Heath J. Ellison, Carl M. Garris,Randy M. Joye, Chase Owens, Savannah Salter, Matthew Thomas,and Steven Zimovan for their keen undergraduate eyes. It goes withoutsaying that all errors remain my sole property.The University of South Carolina granted me a sabbatical to write
this book, and I thank the then-chair of the History department,Lawrence Glickman; Dean of Arts and Sciences Mary Anne
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Fitzpatrick; and Provost Michael Amiridis for their support. I abash-edly apologize to the staffs at the Circulation and Interlibrary Loandepartments at Thomas Cooper Library, where I was surely the mostwayward, and least popular, client.I first studied medieval Judaism, Christianity, and Islam compara-
tively under the guidance of Olivia Remie Constable and MichaelSigner, and both were often before me as I wrote.My sister-in-law Marjon Ames shared chapter deadlines, shared
missing them, and shared the consequent beverage penalties. LaurenSklaroff Lameywas mymodel for a scholar, a teacher, an administrator,and a mother. Laura Braunstein and Carina Huynh Benningfieldbrought me back to reality. My husband, Alexander Vaughan Ames,lovingly supplied Middle English definitions. Caitlin Conway,Alicieont Smith, and especially Melissa Sikora affectionately tendedmy children when I could not.This book is dedicated to my children: May your liberty of mind
and body never be at the mercy of others’ notions of paradise, and oftheir certain faith in how to attain it.
Acknowledgments xiii
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NOTE ON TEXTS AND TRANSLATIONS
•
While it hopes to contribute to scholarly conversations aboutheresy in the Middle Ages, Medieval Heresies has been writtenwith an eye to student use. Wherever possible, I have used primarysources readily available in English translation, including some thatexist online. On rare occasions, I have provided my own transla-tions from the original language, and these are identified in thenotes. Footnotes have been kept to a minimum, and normallyaccompany only direct quotation from primary sources. I encouragereaders to consult not only the “For further reading” section at the endof the book, but also the fuller, traditional bibliography available on thebook’s website.
Perhaps fittingly, this book is unorthodox in its use of diacriticalmarks for transliterated words. For readability, I follow the model ofFred M. Donner, Muhammed and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam(Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2010)in including only those for ‘ayn (‘) and hamza (’).
References to the Hebrew Bible and to the New Testament arefrom M. D. Coogan, M. Z. Brettler, C. A. Newsom, and P. Perkins(eds.), The New Oxford Annotated Bible, New Revised StandardVersion, third edn. (Oxford University Press, 2007). References tothe Qur’an are from The Qur’an, trans. M. A. S. Abdel Haleem(Oxford University Press, 2008).
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