Medieval Encounters aims to promote discussion and dialogue across cultural, linguistic and disciplinary boundaries about the interactions of Jewish, Christian and Muslim culture during the period from the 4th through the 15th century C.E.
Medieval Encounters, Vol 22, Issue 1 – 3
Brill 2016
Table of Contents
- The Brighter Side of Medieval Inter-Religious Encounters. By Harvey J. Hames
- Controversy and Collegiality: A Look at Provence. By Daniel J. Lasker
- Philosophy in Religious Polemics: The Case of Jacob ben Reuben (Provence, 1170). By Gad Freudenthal
- Ashkenazic Talmudic Interpretation and The Jewish–Christian Encounter. By Ephraim Kanarfogel
- Abner de Burgos and the Transfer of Philosophical Knowledge between Judaism and Christianity. By Shalom Sadik
- Translating between the Lines: Medieval Polemic, Romance Bibles, and the Castilian Works of Abner of Burgos/Alfonso of Valladolid. By Ryan Szpiech
- Historicizing Christianity and Profiat Duran’s Kelimat ha-Goyim (1397). By Carsten L. Wilke
- Jean of Avignon: Conversing in Two Worlds. by Naama Cohen-Hanegbi
- Living with Unanswered Questions: The Meaning of the Queries about the Book of Job in Isaac Nathan’s Ḥazut Qashah (“Grievous Vision”). by Ram Ben-Shalom
- Duking it Out in the Arena of Time: Chronology and the Christian–Jewish Encounter (1100–1600). By C. Philipp E. Nothaft
- Christian Calendars in Medieval Hebrew Manuscripts. By Sacha Stern
- The Judeo–Christian Polemic and the Intelligence of Emotions. by Eleazar Gutwirth