This paper surveys the development of the institution of the fundug in the Islamic Mediterranean world, from its pre-Islamic origins as the Byzantine pandocheion until the fifteenth century AD. This institution mediated relations between different cultural and religious groups in the medieval Islamic world and was itself transferred, in slightly differing forms, between groups. By the twelfth century, the funduq had evolved into the parallel form of the fondaco, the Latinate term for hostelries housing communities of Western Christian merchants in Muslim Mediterranean cities. At the same time, the fundug also served as a charitable facility in the Egyptian Jewish community, as testified by documentation in the Cairo Geniza.
This paper focuses upon the interaction between the Northern Tswana kingdoms, located in present-day Botswana, and evangelizing missionaries. Agents of such highly institutionalized, monotheistic ‘religions’ as Judaism, Christianity and Islam mutually conceive of their faiths as entirely incompatible with others and as defining radically distinct communities. The relationship between such communities involves issues of conflict and coexistence that are basically different from the case of the Tswana. Where ‘religion’ is immanent, institutionally as well as culturally, the interface might not only be characterized by processes of separation, but also by mutual adaptation. Evangelizing missionaries, Christianity and the Tswana interacted on the basis of cultural models that only partially overlapped, a fact that gave rise to some controversy. Coexistence may be attributed to the limited extent to which Tswana ideas about superhuman forces are externalized in public rituals that are perceived as ‘religious’ by missionaries. By extension, notions of ‘faith’ and the sacred-secular divide are questioned as concepts adequate for cross-cultural comparison. Such considerations suggest that the colonized are not necessarily the passive victims of evangelizing missionaries. Yet, amongst the Tswana, Christianity has, at times, contributed significantly to aggravate the tensions and conflicts inherent in Tswana polities. This has led Tswana rulers to tackle various challenges, including the rise of indigenous Christian movements, by incorporating the missionary church in their polities as a kind of ‘state church,’ granting it a monopoly.