- Ricold of Monte Croce
Riccoldo of Monte di Croce (1242 –
31 October 1320 ) was an Italian Dominican missionary born inFlorence . In 1267 he entered the Dominican house of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, and in 1272 that of St Catherine inPisa . He started for Acre with apapal commission to preach in 1286 or 1287.In 1288 or 1289 he began to keep a record of his experiences in the
Levant ; this record he probably reduced to final book form inBaghdad . EnteringSyria at Acre, he crossedGalilee to theSea of Tiberias ; thence returning to Acre he seems to have travelled down the coast toJaffa , and so up toJerusalem . After visiting theJordan River and theDead Sea he leftPalestine by the coast road, retracing his steps to Acre and passing on byTripoli andTortosa intoCilicia . From the Cilician port ofLajazzo (nowYumurtalik inTurkey ) he started on the great high road toTabriz in northPersia . Crossing the Taurus he travelled on bySivas of Cappadocia toErzerum , the neighborhood ofArarat andTabriz . In and near Tabriz he preached for several months, after which he proceeded to Baghdad viaMosul andTikrit . In Baghdad he stayed several years, studying the "Qur'an " and other works ofIslam ic theology, for controversial purposes, arguing withNestorian Christians, and writing. In 1300-1301 Riccoldo again appeared in Florence. About 1300 in Florence he wrote important works: "Liber peregrinationis"; "Contra legem Sarracenorum"; and "Ad nationes orientales."As a traveller and observer his merits are conspicuous. His account of the
Tatars and his sketch of Islamic religion and manners are especially noteworthy. In spite of strong prejudice, he shows remarkable breadth of view and appreciation of merit in systems the most hostile to his own.Quote
:"And so it came to pass that I was in Baghdad, “among the captives by the river of Chebar” [Ezek. 1:1] , the
Tigris . This garden of delights in which I found myself enthralled me, for it was like a paradise in its abundance of trees, its fertility, its many fruits. This garden was watered by the rivers of Paradise, and the inhabitants built gilt houses all around it. Yet I was saddened by the massacre and capture of the Christian people. I wept over the loss of Acre, seeing the Saracens joyous and prospering, the Christians squalid and consternated: little children, young girls, old people, whimpering, threatened to be led as captives and slaves into the remotest countries of the East, among barbarous nations.":"Suddenly, in this sadness, swept up into an unaccustomed astonishment, I began, stupefied, to ponder God's judgment concerning the government of the world, especially concerning the Saracens and the Christians. What could be the cause of such massacre and such degradation of the Christian people? Of so much worldly prosperity for the perfidious Saracen people? Since I could not simply be amazed, nor could I find a solution to this problem, I decided to write to God and his celestial court, to express the cause of my astonishment, to open my desire through prayer, so that God might confirm me in the truth and sincerity of the Faith, that he quickly put an end to the law, or rather the perfidy, of the Saracens, and more than anything else that he liberate the Christian captives from the hands of the enemies".::"Riccoldo da Montecroce, Epistolae V de perditione Acconis (1291)"
http://utenti.lycos.it/emilioweb/p_ricc.htm
External links
* Riccoldo [http://www1.sdu.dk/Hum/kvj/Riccoldo/index.html "Riccoldi Florentini Libelli ad nationes orientales editio princeps"]
* Ed Emery, [http://www.geocities.com/DanteStudies/riccoldo.html "Riccoldo of Monte Croce", Research Notes on Dante Alighieri]References
*1911
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