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The Apocalypse of Empire - Imperial Eschatology in Late Antiquity and Early Islam (Hardcover)
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The Apocalypse of Empire - Imperial Eschatology in Late Antiquity and Early Islam (Hardcover)
Series: Divinations: Rereading Late Ancient Religion
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In The Apocalypse of Empire, Stephen J. Shoemaker argues that
earliest Islam was a movement driven by urgent eschatological
belief that focused on the conquest, or liberation, of the biblical
Holy Land and situates this belief within a broader cultural
environment of apocalyptic anticipation. Shoemaker looks to the
Qur'an's fervent representation of the imminent end of the world
and the importance Muhammad and his earliest followers placed on
imperial expansion. Offering important contemporary context for the
imperial eschatology that seems to have fueled the rise of Islam,
he surveys the political eschatologies of early Byzantine
Christianity, Judaism, and Sasanian Zoroastrianism at the advent of
Islam and argues that they often relate imperial ambition to
beliefs about the end of the world. Moreover, he contends,
formative Islam's embrace of this broader religious trend of
Mediterranean late antiquity provides invaluable evidence for
understanding the beginnings of the religion at a time when sources
are generally scarce and often highly problematic. Scholarship on
apocalyptic literature in early Judaism and Christianity frequently
maintains that the genre is decidedly anti-imperial in its very
nature. While it may be that early Jewish apocalyptic literature
frequently displays this tendency, Shoemaker demonstrates that this
quality is not characteristic of apocalypticism at all times and in
all places. In the late antique Mediterranean as in the European
Middle Ages, apocalypticism was regularly associated with ideas of
imperial expansion and triumph, which expected the culmination of
history to arrive through the universal dominion of a divinely
chosen world empire. This imperial apocalypticism not only affords
an invaluable backdrop for understanding the rise of Islam but also
reveals an important transition within the history of Western
doctrine during late antiquity.
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