02570 am 22005293u 450 991076577450332120210107213408.02-503-55287-0(CKB)3800000000020899(OAPEN)632052(MiAaPQ)EBC5206325(Au-PeEL)EBL5206325(CaPaEBR)ebr11487180(OCoLC)1018168930(NjHacI)993800000000020899(PPN)185434533(EXLCZ)99380000000002089920180808d|||| uy enguuuuu---auuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLa cohabitation religieuse dans les villes Européennes, Xe - XVe siècles1st ed.TurnhoutBrepols2014Turnhout :Brepols,2014.1 online resource (326) Religion and law in Medieval Christian and Muslim Societies ;v.32-503-55252-8 Medieval towns, from Portugal to Hungary to Egypt, were places of contact between members of different religious communities, Muslim, Christian and Jewish, who rubbed shoulders in the ports and on the streets, who haggled in the markets, signed contracts, and shared wells, courtyards, dining tables, bath houses, and sometimes beds. These interactions caused legal problems from the point of view of the Jewish, Christian and Muslim judicial scholars of the middle ages, not to mention for the rulers of these towns. These legal attempts to define and solve the problems posed by interreligious relations are the subject of this volume, which brings together the work of seventeen scholars from nine countries (France, Italy, Spain, Hungary, Portugal, Lebanon, Israel, Tunisia, USA), specialists in history, law, archeology and religion.Religion and law in Medieval Christian and Muslim SocietiesLa cohabitation religieuse dans les villes Européennes, Xe - XVe siècles Religion and Law in Medieval Christian and Muslim Societies vol. 3Religious cohabitation in European towns European historybicsscEuropean history307.760940902Boissellier StéphaneTolan JohnMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910765774503321La cohabitation religieuse dans les villes Européennes, Xe - XVe siècles3651042UNINA