Richard Fletcher
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Books
Conversion of Europe
The conversion of the pagan world that began in the obscurity of the Dark Ages was in no way inevitable. England did not embrace Christianity until A.D. 627, and the last European conversion occurred in Lithuania late in the Middle Ages, in 1386. How did it all happen - and why? In a work of scholarship that often reads like a detective story and owes as much to keen intuition as to a firm mastery of difficult sources, one of Britain's foremost medievalists tackles these questions. In a narrative that is both dramatic and thought-provoking, he relates the story of the Christianization of Europe. It is a very large story, for conversion was not only a matter of religious belief. With it came enormous cultural change: Latin literacy and books, Roman notions of law and property, and the concept of town life as well as new tastes in food, drink, and dress. Whether from faith or by force, from self-interest or by revelation, conversion had an immense impact that is with us even today.
The Cross and the Crescent
A short, brilliant account of the relations between Islam and Christianity from Muhammad to the Reformation. Fletcher argues that though there were trading and cultural interactions between Islam and Christianity during the period when Arabs controlled most of the Mediterranean world, neither side was remotely interested in the religion of the other. "Christian and Moslem lived side by side in a state of mutual religious aversion. Given these circumstances, if religious passions were to be stirred up, confrontation would probably be violent." He shows how religious misunderstanding and antagonism between "the peoples of the book" has been present since their earliest encounters.
Where You Go, I Will Follow
An Historical novel describing the life and times of Jesus of Nazareth from a different perspective! It is clear from the bible texts that Simon Peter had a mother in law therefore he must have had a wife. This is her story as it might have been. Rachel grows up as the daughter of a fisherman from the northern end of the Sea of Galilee at a time when the country is occupied and oppressed by the Romans. She marries her childhood companion, Simon, and they, together with their friends, become the followers of an itinerant storyteller who sets out to change the world! A lifelong romance between two ordinary people caught up in extraordinary events
The Quest for El Cid
Rodrigo Diaz, the legendary warrior-knight of eleventh-century Castile known as El Cid, is remembered today as the Christian hero of the Spanish crusade who waged wars of re-conquest for the triumph of the Cross over the Crescent. He is still honored in Spain as a national hero for liberating the fatherland from the occupying Moors. Yet, as Richard Fletcher shows in this award-winning book, there are many contradictions between eleventh-century reality and the mythology that developed with the passing years.