Henry Stubbe (1632--1676) was an extraordinary English scholar
who challenged his contemporaries by writing about Islam as a
monotheistic revelation in continuity with Judaism and
Christianity. His major work, "The Originall & Progress of
Mahometanism," was the first English text to document the Prophet
Muhammad's life positively, celebrate the Qur'an as a divine
revelation, and praise the Muslim toleration of Christians,
undermining a long legacy of European prejudice and hostility.
Nabil Matar, a leading scholar of Islamic-British relations,
standardizes Stubbe's text and situates it within England's
theological and intellectual climate in the seventeenth century. He
shows how, to draw a historical portrait of Muhammad, Stubbe
embraced travelogues, Latin commentaries, studies on Jewish customs
and Scripture, and, most important, Arabic chronicles, many written
by medieval Christian Arabs who had lived in the midst of the
Islamic polity. No European writer before or for a long time after
Stubbe produced anything similar to what he wrote about Muhammad
the "great Prophet," Ali the "gallant" advocate, and the "standing
miracle" of the Qur'an. Stubbe's book therefore makes a unique
contribution to the study of the representation of Islam in Western
thought.
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