1st Edition

The Journey of Deacon Bodo from the Rhine to the Guadalquivir Apostasy and Conversion to Judaism in Early Medieval Europe

By Frank Riess Copyright 2019
228 Pages
by Routledge

228 Pages
by Routledge

228 Pages
by Routledge

The story of Bodo begins in the ninth century around the time of the death of Charlemagne in 814. It centres on a young Aleman aristocrat and his conversion to Judaism in 838, followed by his flight to the Muslim world of Al-Andalus. His apostasy constitutes an arresting footnote in the history of the Carolingian period, his change of faith viewed as a shocking episode attributed by some to an... Read more

List of maps and plates;  Acknowledgements;  Permissions;  List of abbreviations;  Chronology of events Overture;  1 God’s gift;  2 Father and sons;  3 The Messiah who never was;  4 What the emir saw;  5 Córdoba relics and the archbishop’s letter;  6 The Talmud and the Academy;  7 The answer of Maimonides and Judah Halevi;  8 Afterlives;  Coda;  BibliographyIndex

Biography

Frank Riess is an Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck College, London. His monograph Narbonne and its Territory in Late Antiquity: From the Visigoths to the Arabs was published in 2013.

‘Scholars interested in the nature of conversion in the early Middle Ages will find this book stimulating’ - Ruth Mazo Karras, Reading Religion

'This erudite and engaging reconstruction of the life of Bodo/Eleazar situates its elusive protagonist at the intersection of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish worlds in flux, providing a sweeping account of the political and religious transformations of the ninth and tenth centuries and shedding new light on the meanings of inter-religious conversion' - Paola Tartakoff, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

'This is a nuanced and well-written study of Bodo/Eleazar, a ninth-century Christian convert to Judaism. As the first book dedicated to him and his journey from the Carolingian empire to the caliphate of Cordoba, it will be of great interest to scholars of medieval religious history, literature, and Jewish-Christian relations. Riess draws on a wide array of evidence, including archival documents, poetry, letters, and contemporary polemics to paint a fine-grained portrait of Bodo/Eleazar’s life and times. The richness of the historical account and attentive reading of relevant sources make this a valuable new study of an extraordinary yet overlooked figure' - Ryan Szpiech, University of Michigan