- Theodore Abu-Qurrah
Theodore Abū Qurrah was a 9th century
Christian Arab theologian who lived in the early Islamic period.He was born around
750 A.D. in the city of Edessa, in northernMesopotamia , and was for theChalcedonian orMelkite bishop of the nearby city ofHarran between795 and812 . He was removed from his see by theMelkite bishop ofAntioch ,Theodoret (795 -812 ), for reasons which remain unclear, and between his deposition and death he travelled widely, taking part in theological debates and polemics.He died between820 and825 .Abū Qurrah was one of the first Christian authors to use Arabic. Some few of his works were translated into Greek, and so circulated in
Byzantium , [For those works that have survived solely in Greek, see J.P. Migne, Patrologia cursus completus, series graeca, vol. 97, coll. 1461-1610.] but he was mainly known only to Arabic-speaking Christians. He also claimed to have written thirty treatises inSyriac , but none of these have yet been identified. [On the manuscripts of Theodore Abū Qurrah's works, see J. Nasrallah, 'Dialogue Islamo-Chrétien à propos de publications récentes', Revue des Etudes Islamiques 46 (1978), pp. 126-32 and Graf, GCAL, II, pp. 7-26.] His writings provide an important witness to Christian thought in the early Islamic world. A number of them were edited with German translations byGeorg Graf and have now been translated into English by John C. Lamoreaux. [Theodore Abū Qurrah, translated by John C. Lamoreaux, Middle Eastern Texts Initiative: The Library of the Christian East, 1 (Brigham Young University Press, 2005)]Abū Qurrah argued for the rightness of his faith against the habitual challenges of
Islam ,Judaism and those Christians who did not accept the doctrinal formulations of the Council ofChalcedon , and in doing so re-articulated traditional Christian teachings at times using the language and concepts ofIslamic theologians: he has been described bySydney H. Griffith as a Christian mutakallim. [S.H> Griffith, 'Theodore Abū Qurrah's Arabic Tract on the Christian Practice of Venerating Images', Journal of the American Oriental Society 105:1 (1985), pp. 53-73, at p. 53.] He attracted the attention of at least one MuslimMu'tazilite mutakallim, 'Isa ibn Sabih al Murdar (d.840 ), who is recorded (by the biobibliographical writer,Ibn al Nadim , who died in995 A.D.) as having written a refutation of Abū Qurrah. [I. Krackovskij, 'Theodore Abū Qurrah in the Muslim Writers of the Ninth-Tenth Centuries', Christianskij Vostok 4 (1915), p. 306; I. Dick, 'Un continuateur arabe de Saint Jean Damascène: Théodore Abuqurra, évêque melkite de Harran', Proche Orient Chrétien, 12 (1962), p. 328.] The subjects covered were, in the main, the doctrine of theTrinity , theIncarnation , and theSacraments , as well as the practices of facing east in prayer (rather than towardsJerusalem orMecca ), and the veneration of the cross and other images.In his On the Existence of God and the True Religion, he used a thought experiment in which he imagined himself having grown up away from civilization (on a mountain) and descending to 'the cities' to inquire after the truth of religion: an attempt to provide a philosophical argument in support of Chalcedonian Christianity from first principles.
Theodore also translated the pseudo-Aristotelian
De virtutibus animae into Arabic from Greek forTahir ibn Husayn . [Sydney H. Griffith, The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque: Christians and Muslims in the world of Islam (Princeton University Press, 2008), p. 107.]He has traditionally been thought to have been a monk at the monastery of
Mar Sabas (the monastery where, earlier,John of Damascus had lived), but this has been shown to be due to a confusion withTheodore of Edessa [John C. Lamoreaux, 'The Biography of Theodore Abū Qurrah Revisited', Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 56 (2002), pp. 25-40. For the identification with Mar Sabas, see Ignace Dick, 'Un continuateur arabe de Saint Jean Damascène: Théodore Abuqurra, évêque melkite de Harran', Proche Orient Chrétien, 12 (1962).]References
Published Works
- I. Arendzen, Theodori Abu Kurra De cultu imaginum libellus e codice arabico (Bonn, 1897)
- C. Bacha, Les oeuvres arabes de Théodore Aboucara (Beyrout, 1904)
- C. Bacha, Un traité des oeuvres arabde de Théodore Abou-Kurra (Tripoli [Syria] – Rome, 1905)
- G. Graf, Die arabischen Schriften des Theodor Abu Qurra, Bischofs von Harran (ca. 740-820), Forschungen zur christlichen Literatur- un Dogemengeschichte, X Band, 3/4 Heft (Paderborn, 1910)
- L. Cheikho, 'Mimar li Tadurus Abi Qurrah fi Wugud al-Haliq wa d-Din al-Qawim', al-Machriq, 15 (1912), pp. 757-74, 825-842
- G. Graf, Des Theodor Abu Kurra Traktat uber den Schopfer un die wahre Religion (Munster, 1913)
- I. Dick, 'Deux érits inédits de Théodore Abuqurra', Le Muséon, 72 (1959), pp. 53-67
- S. H. Griffith, 'Some Unpublished Arabic Sayings Attributed to Theodore Abu Qurrah', Le Muséon, 92 (1979), pp. 29-35
Links
* [http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/t/theodoros_a_q.shtml BBKL] - in German
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