- Robert of Ketton
Robert of Ketton (
Latin : Robertus Ketenensis) (1110? – 1160?) was an Englishmedieval theologian, astronomer andArabist .Ketton , where Robert was either born or perhaps first took holy orders, is a small village inRutland , a few miles from Stamford.Robert is believed to have been educated at the Cathedral School of
Paris . In 1134 he travelled fromFrance to the East for four years with his fellow student and friendHerman of Carinthia (also known as Herman Dalmatin). They visited theByzantine Empire , theCrusader State s inPalestine andDamascus . Both men were to become famous as translators from theArabic . By 1141 Robert had moved toSpain where the division of the country between Muslim and Christian rulers made it a natural base for translators. Some sources identify him withRobert of Chester (Latin : Robertus Castrensis), who was also active in Spain as a translator in the 1140s.Although he received support from the Church—he became
Archdeacon ofPamplona in 1143—Robert's preference was for translating scientific rather than theological works. He is known to have studiedEuclid and to have translated the work ofAl Battani andAvicenna , and it seems that he would not have made the translation for which he is famous, that of theQur'an , without the encouragement of the French AbbotPeter the Venerable , who wished to have access to Islamic texts. In 1142 Robert and other scholars met with Peter the Venerable, who was visiting Spain, and Robert set to work translating the Qur'an intoLatin . The translation was done by 1143; entitled "Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete ", it was the first translation of the book into a European language and remained the standard well into the sixteenth century. The last record we have of Robert's career is that he became a canon of Tudela in 1157.ee also
*
Latin translations of the 12th century References
* Charles Burnett, ‘Ketton, Robert of (fl. 1141–1157)’,Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
* Thomas E. Burman, "Tafsir and Translation: Traditional Arabic Quran Exegesis and the Latin Qurans of Robert of Ketton and Mark of Toledo" in "Speculum" vol. 73 (1998) pp. 703-732.External links
*Robert in Spain http://libro.uca.edu/monastic/monastic12.htm
*Islamic perspective http://www.msgr.ca/msgr-2/Koran%20-%20Nativity%20-%2001.htm
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