The Florentine Dominican Riccoldo da Monte Croce was a thirteenth-century missionary and apologist to Eastern Christianity and Islam, who travelled throughout the Middle East during a period in which the Latin Church was in ferment, challenged by the internal danger of heresy, and external threats from Mongols and Muslims. Yet, this essay places Riccoldo, whose life has been the subject of little extended study, particularly in English, at the end of a thirtyyear period of optimism and anti-crusade feroour in the West. Not only was Europe rediscovering Eastern Christianity, but there was hope of the possible conversion of both Mongols and Arabs to the Latin rite, or at least political alliances with the Mongols against the Muslim empires. The first part of Riccoldo’s journey was a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where his faith and sense of mission were renewed. During the second, and longer part of his journey, Riccoldo encountered many people of different races—Turks, Kurds, Arabs and Mongols—and religions—Christians of all persuasions, Buddhists, and both Shiʿi and Sunni Muslims. While his initial impression of Muslim spirituality and ritual was positive, it is radically changed when, while in Baghdad, he witnessed the display of prisoners and booty resultins from the fall of Acre in 1291. Riccoldo’s subsequent crisis of faith called into question his belief in the providence of God, and would radically colour his understanding of the place of Islam in what he had heretofore perceived as ‘Christian history’. For Riccoldo, the fall of Acre would have to be answered from a Christian theological perspective, with lasting significance for the history of Muslim-Christian relations.
Ancient South Arabian civilization has been largely ignored by anthropologists in their comparative study of complex cultures. This omission of South Arabia from the catalogue of civilizations is difficult to explain considering that during the first millennium BC this region gave rise to an economy based on long-distance trade in luxury goods and a complex division of labour which supported an urban culture and mature state politics manifest in a social structure based on class, a developed ritual life, and a military organization which conducted full-scale warfare with other regional civilizations. This paper deals with the evolution of the state in South Arabia and distinguishes the key factors which define a specifically South Arabian political culture. Besides the monopoly on the incense and spice trade between the Indian East and the Mediterranean region, South Arabian civilization was characterized by a dynamic tribe-state relationship; this dialectic promoted the rise and fall of numerous polities, as well as competition between ritual centres and peripheries. Overall, South Arabian political culture provided a rich and complicated background to the rise Of monotheism in the peninsula, an inter-civilizational competition for control over the Red Sea shipping lanes, and the appearance of Islam.
