The remarkable extension in depth and width of Muslim intellectual life
can be fathomed and measured only against the background of what went on
immediately before, and simultaneously elsewhere, or it will remain, in
any real sense, unexplored." This statement by the late Franz Rosenthal
is, in a sense, the red thread of the present volume which unites 35
articles by renowned scholars of Islamic Studies, Middle Eastern
Languages and Civilizations, and various allied fields of research in
honour of a scholar congenial to Franz Rosenthal and exemplary in his
scientific carefulness and integrity: Dr Gerhard Endress, Professor of
Oriental Philology and Islamic Studies at the Ruhr University Bochum.
Central topics of the contributions include Arabic philosophy and its
Greek sources and Latin reception, the history and historiography of
Arabic-Islamic science, and Islamic concepts of language, knowledge,
science and pedagogy. Other articles deal with qur'anic studies, Arabic
lexicography and linguistics, the history of Middle Eastern
civilizations, the medieval translation movements from Greek into Arabic
and from Arabic into Latin as well as with political and eschatological
theories of medieval Islam. Rooted in different scientific traditions
and methodological approaches the studies collected in this Festschrift
form a vivid and stimulating synopsis of more than 1000 years of Middle
Eastern and Mediterranean intellectual, social and cultural history.