PICTURING THE QURAN: REPRESENTATIONS OF THE MUSLIM HOLY BOOK IN EUROPEAN ICONOGRAPHY, 15TH-18TH CENTURIES INVITATION#
Date: 16 June 2023, 15:00-16:45 (CET)Venue: Conference Hall, Library and Information, Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1051 Budapest, Arany János u. 1.
The Academia Europaea Budapest Knowledge Hub, in collaboration with the Institute of History of the Research Centre for the Humanities, cordially invites you to attend the public lecture “Picturing the Quran: representations of the Muslim holy book in European iconography, 15th-18th centuries” by Professor John Tolan, Member of the History and Archaelolgy section of Academia Europaea and PI of the ERC Synergy project EuQu.
EuQu is an ambitious six year research project (2019-2025) studying the ways in which the Islamic Holy Book is embedded in the intellectual, religious and cultural history of Medieval and Early Modern Europe. This ERC Synergy Grant project studies how the Qur’an has been translated, interpreted, adapted and used by Christians, European Jews, freethinkers, atheists and European Muslims in order to understand how the Holy Book has influenced both culture and religion in Europe.
Program#
15:00 - 15:10 Welcome by a representative of Academia Europaea Budapest Knowledge Hub and Professor Ferenc Tóth (Institute of
History, Research Centre for the Humanities), moderator of the event
15:10 - 16:10 Lecture by John Tolan
16:10 – 16:45 Q&A
Registration#
Registration to the event is required and only personal attendance is possible. To register, please go to: https://forms.gle/CPBCbEvH3TiP23hB6
Download the invitation.
About John Tolan#
John Tolan is a historian interested in the entangled lives of Jews, Christians and Muslims in the Middle Ages and beyond. He has taught in universities in North America, Europe, Africa and the Middle East; he is currently professor of History at the
University of Nantes (France) and member of the Academia Europaea. He has received numerous prizes and distinctions,
including two major grants from the European Research Council and a prize from the Académie Française. He writes
in English, French and Spanish; his work has been translated into Italian, Turkish, Polish, Russian, Bosnian, Arabic and
Korean. He is author of numerous articles and books, including Saracens (2002), Francis and the Sultan (2009), Faces
of Muhammad (2019), Nouvelle histoire de l’islam, VIIe-XXIe siècles (2022), and England’s Jews: Finance, Violence, and the
Crown in the Thirteenth Century (2023). He is one of the four coordinators of the European Research Council program “The
European Qur’an” (2019-2025; https://euqu.eu).