Skip to Content

Sponsors

No results

Tags

No results

Types

No results

Search Results

Events

No results
Search events using: keywords, sponsors, locations or event type
When / Where
All occurrences of this event have passed.
This listing is displayed for historical purposes.

Presented By: Center for Armenian Studies

ASP Lecture

Łewond’s Arab Incursions into Armenia and the Historiography of Arab Armīniya (8–9th Century)

Alison Vacca, Manoogian Post-doctoral Fellow, U-M. Sponsors: ASP, CMENAS, Medieval and Early Modern Studies.

This talk will address the currents in nineteenth- and twentieth-century historiography concerning the Arab period in Armenia, focusing specifically on the use of Arabic and Armenian sources in the works of Armenian, European, and Arab scholars. In particular, it will consider some of the difficulties in the medieval textual material available concerning this period and will also introduce the speaker’s project on Łewond’s eighth- or ninth-century history ArÅ¡awank”˜ Arabac”˜ i Hays [Arab Invasions into Armenia]. She is currently working with a thirteenth-century manuscript of this Armenian history, which covers the establishment of the Caliphate, developments in medieval Armenia, and relations between Byzantium and Islam from 632 to 788. The ensuing discussion will review a few specific examples of confusing or interesting details from Łewond’s text and how to contextualize them with consideration of historical sources in both Arabic and Armenian.

Alison Vacca received her Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies from the University of Michigan. Her dissertation, “From K'usti Kapkoh to al-Garbi: Sasanian Antecedents, the Sectarian Milieu, and the Creation of an Islamic Frontier in Arminiya (c. 700–862 CE),” explores the interrelation of religious and ethnic groups in the Near East. In particular she is interested in the eighth- or ninth-century historian Łewond and his ArÅ¡awank' Arabac' i Hays, an Armenian history covering establishment of the Caliphate, developments in medieval Armenia, and relations between Byzantium and Islam from 632 to 788. She plans to contextualize Łewond’s contribution with the literary production of the medieval Near East. Alison was a Fulbright Scholar at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem where she studied Islamic, Armenian, and Jerusalemite history as well as Arabic, Armenian, and Hebrew. She has also completed a Certificate in Museum Studies, which included interning in the Islamic art collection at the Royal Ontario Museum.

Explore Similar Events

  •  Loading Similar Events...

Back to Main Content