Les religions pratiquées par les membres de la tribu de Kinda (Arabie) à la veille de l'Islam

Archaeological research carried out in the Arabian Peninsula in the last forty years confirms that in Late Antiquity Judaism had numerous followers in Yemen and the Ḥijāz. Among these Arabian Jews, a few were for sure converts and many others were probably as well. A primary issue concerns the natur...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Judaïsme ancien
Main Author: Robin, Christian 1943- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:French
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Published: Brepols [2013]
In: Judaïsme ancien
IxTheo Classification:AX Inter-religious relations
BB Indigenous religions
BJ Islam
Online Access: Volltext (Verlag)
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Summary:Archaeological research carried out in the Arabian Peninsula in the last forty years confirms that in Late Antiquity Judaism had numerous followers in Yemen and the Ḥijāz. Among these Arabian Jews, a few were for sure converts and many others were probably as well. A primary issue concerns the nature of this Judaism, which appears to be different from those of rabbis (Robin, forthcoming). A second question, the topic of this contribution, is related to chronology and modes of conversion. Kinda, one of the Arab tribes in the south of the Peninsula - to be distinguished from Ḥimyaritetribes of Yemen -included numerous followers of Judaism, as Professor Michael Lecker has shown in two contributions published in 1994 and 1995, these exclusively based on Arab traditions. This tribe's history, however, is also of much interest in that it is also known by a series of Ḥimyariteinscriptions and by a few allusions to its princes in Byzantine literature. It was therefore desirable to have a close look once more at the topic so as to draw up a comprehensive inventory of all that we know of the Kindites' religious practices, after having precisely established this tribe's chronology and outlined its territory and settlement. It appears that Judaism probably was the dominant religion of aristocratic lineages of the tribe of Kinda. Nevertheless this observation does not concern Kindites who placed themselves at the service of Persia or Byzantium; the religious orientation of the latter, evidently determined by political relationships, can be described as “opportunistic”. As for simple members of the tribe, if indeed they were influenced by the example of their princes, they do not appear to have converted collectively. In Pre-Islamic Arabia, religion remains a personal issue.
ISSN:2507-0339
Contains:Enthalten in: Judaïsme ancien
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1484/J.JAAJ.1.103528