Storia de Mahometh

The Storia de Mahometh (or Istoria de Mahomet) is a short anonymous polemical
Date and authorship
The Storia is the earliest known biography of Muḥammad in Latin. It was certainly written before 850, since a copy was consulted in the
The Storia is most probably of
Textual history
The Storia exists in two recensions, a short one (A) and a long one (B). The short one is found in a letter from John of Seville to Paul Albar, the sixth in the surviving collection of Paul's correspondence. It is known from a single manuscript, Archivo Catedralicio de Córdoba, n° 1. It is probably a shortened version of the long recension.[6] Possibly, it is a short summary of a lost common source,[7] such as a Greek tract from before 750.[8] It is unknown where or how John came upon the text he summarized.[9]
The long recension is preserved in four manuscripts and there is a printed edition based on a now lost fifth manuscript.
- Codex Albeldensis (Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial, MS d.I.2) of 975[4][12]
- Codex Aemilianensis (Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial, MS d.I.1) of 992[12] or 994[4]
The only known manuscript of Eulogius' Liber apologeticus was discovered in the 16th century by Pedro Ponce de León and used for the edition of Ambrosio de Morales in 1791–1792, but is now lost.[13] There are two slightly different versions of the long recension. The texts in the Albeldensis and Aemilianensis codices are almost identical. MS 8831 is a Castilian copy of the Rotensis and Eulogius' version bears more similarity to this version as well.[4][14]
The short recension, only about a paragraph in length, is entitled Adnotatio Mammetis Arabum principis,[12] or "A note on Muḥammad, chief of the Arabs".[15] The long recensin of the Storia is the longer of two Latin biographies of Muḥammad in the Codex Rotensis, the other being the Tultusceptru de libro domni Metobii.[16] There it bears the title Storia de Mahometh (Story of Muḥammad).[10] In the other three codices it is entitled Istoria de Mahomet (Story of Muḥammad).[17] In his critical text, Manuel Díaz y Díaz assigns it the title Notitia de Mahmeth pseudo propheta (Notice of Muḥammad the false prophet).[18] Ann Christys uses the title Life of Muḥammad.[4]
Synopsis

The Storia is a polemic, caustic in tone, that takes facts from the
The Storia dates the rise of Muḥammad to the seventh year of the Emperor
According to the Storia, Muḥammad was an orphan raised by a widow.[4] He was a usurer who by attending Christians gatherings became the wisest among the Arabs. Soon after he married his guardian, he was visited by a vulture that claimed to be the angel Gabriel and told him to present himself to the Arabs as a prophet. Thus, he turned them away from the worship of idols and ordered them to take up arms in his name.[19] He defeated the armies of the Byzantine Empire and established himself in Damascus. He reigned for ten years, amending the law to allow himself to marry the divorcée of one of his followers.[4] He composed psalms and hymns in order to enhance his status.[20] He miraculously tamed a wild camel.[15] Towards the end of his life, he predicted that he would be resurrected three days after his death.[4] When this did not happen, his followers assumed that their presence was scaring off the angels and so they left his decomposing body unguarded, whereupon dogs began to eat it and they were forced to bury it.[21] An annual slaughter of dogs was instituted among Muslims to avenge their prophet.[5]
Analysis
The Storia borrows from legends then current regarding the Antichrist and portrays Muḥammad as one of the false prophets predicted by the New Testament.[20]
The author of the Storia had good knowledge of the traditional Islamic biography of Muḥammad. He knew that his subject was an orphan and a merchant; that he married his patroness,
Each piece of information taken from the traditional biography is given a negative twist. As a merchant, he is depicted as a greedy usurer. His marriages are products of untamed lust. He turns his followers into warriors for personal gain. The angel that appears to him is nothing but the devil in disguise.
The conclusion of the Storia can be contrasted with that of the other biography of Muḥammad in the Codex Rotensis. The Storia ends by describing Muḥammad as "a prophet who committed not only his own soul, but those of many others, to hell".[25] The Tultusceptru says that "his heart was turned away by the unclean spirit ... and so what was to be a vessel of Christ became a vessel of Mammon to the perdition of his soul" and "all who were converted to this error".[26] While the Storia blames Muḥammad for leading his followers to Hell, the Tultusceptru treats him as a victim and a dupe.[27]
Notes
- ^ a b Wolf 2014a, p. 14 n10.
- ^ Hoyland 1997, pp. 514–515.
- ^ a b Díaz y Díaz 1970, p. 156.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Christys 2002, pp. 62–63.
- ^ a b c d Hoyland 1997, p. 514.
- ^ Díaz y Díaz 1970, p. 150.
- ^ a b Wolf 2014a, p. 14 n9.
- ^ Hoyland 1997, p. 515.
- ^ Hoyland 1997, p. 513 n209.
- ^ a b Furtado 2016, p. 79.
- ^ a b Tolan 2010b, p. 722.
- ^ a b c d e Díaz y Díaz 1970, p. 153.
- ^ Tolan 2010a, p. 681.
- ^ Díaz y Díaz 1970, p. 155.
- ^ a b c Hoyland 1997, p. 513.
- ^ Wolf 1990, p. 89.
- ^ Di Cesare 2012, p. 16 n27.
- ^ Díaz y Díaz 1970, p. 157.
- ^ a b c d Wolf 2014a, p. 15.
- ^ a b Di Cesare 2012, p. 16.
- ^ a b Wolf 2014a, pp. 15–16.
- ^ Wolf 2014a, p. 15 n11.
- ^ Hoyland 1997, p. 513 n208.
- ^ Wolf 2014a, p. 16 n13.
- ^ Wolf 2014a, p. 16.
- ^ Wolf 2014a, p. 18.
- ^ Wolf 2014a, p. 19.
Bibliography
- Christys, Ann (2002). Christians in al-Andalus (711–1000). Routledge.
- Di Cesare, Michelina (2012). The Pseudo-historical Image of the Prophet Muhammad in Medieval Latin Literature: A Repertory. De Gruyter.
- Díaz y Díaz, Manuel C. (1970). "Los textos antimahometanos más antiguos en códices españoles". Archives d'histoire doctrinale et littéraire du Moyen Âge. 37: 149–168. JSTOR 44514635.
- Furtado, Rodrigo (2016). "The Chronica Prophetica in MS. Madrid, RAH Aem. 78". In Lucio Cristante; Vanni Veronesi (eds.). Forme di accesso al sapere in età tardoantica e altomedievale (PDF). Vol. VI. Edizioni Università di Trieste. pp. 75–100.
- Seeing Islam As Others Saw It: A Survey and Evaluation of Christian, Jewish and Zoroastrian Writings on Early Islam. Darwin Press.
- Tolan, John V. (2010). "Eulogius of Cordova". In David Thomas; Alex Mallett (eds.). Christian-Muslim Relations: A Bibliographical History. Vol. 2 (900–1050). Brill. pp. 679–683.
- Tolan, John V. (2010). "Istoria de Mahomet". In David Thomas; Alex Mallett (eds.). Christian-Muslim Relations: A Bibliographical History. Vol. 2 (900–1050). Brill. pp. 721–722.
- Wolf, Kenneth Baxter (1990). "The Earliest Latin Lives of Muḥammad". In Michael Gervers; Ramzi Jibran Bikhazi (eds.). Conversion and Continuity: Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands, Eighth to Eighteenth Centuries. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. pp. 89–101.
- Wolf, Kenneth Baxter (2014). "Counterhistory in the Earliest Latin Lives of Muhammad". In Christiane J. Gruber; Avinoam Shalem (eds.). The Image of the Prophet between Ideal and Ideology: A Scholarly Investigation – The Image of the Prophet Between Ideal and Ideology. De Gruyter. pp. 13–26. ISBN 978-3-11-031238-6.
- Wolf, Kenneth Baxter (2014). "Falsifying the Prophet: Muhammad at the Hands of His Earliest Christian Biographers in the West". In Martijn Icks; Eric Shiraev (eds.). Character Assassination throughout the Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 105–120. ISBN 978-1-349-48512-3.
- Yolles, Julian; Weiss, Jessica, eds. (2018). Medieval Latin Lives of Muhammad. Harvard University Press.