"Febe Armanios establishes her rightful place as a leading scholar whose expertise covers the yawning gap between late antiquity and the contemporary period...
Coptic Christianity in Ottoman Egypt should appeal to multiple scholarly audiences in Middle Eastern history and religious studies. Beyond a scholarly audience, this monograph, now available in affordable paperback version, merits a broader readership for anyone interested in the life of minority communities in the Arab Muslim world." --
International Journal of Middle East Studies"A fascinating and important contribution to Ottoman Egyptian history, Coptic history, and the history of minorities under Muslim rule."--
Journal of the American Academy of Religion"A rigorous yet richly imaginative analysis of Egypt's Coptic community in the early modern period.... Via deep analysis of a limited corpus of available documentary sources, Armanios has succeeded in shedding important new light on a significant but heretofore little understood era in Coptic history."--
Church History "This is a very valuable book: the first comprehensive assessment of the Coptic community and its diverse religious expressions in the Ottoman period . The book deserves to be widely read. It should be of interest to social, political, ecclesiological and intellectual historians, especially to those interested in minority cultures and issues of identity formation and maintenance. With its generally clear writing style and logical structure, the book should also be accessible to students and a wider readership, for example within the Coptic community." --
Al-Masaq: Islam and the Medieval Mediterranean"Febe Armanios has written an innovative, fascinating, and thoroughly researched work of relevance to anyone interested in the history of the Copts and of Christians in the Middle East. She explores an array of novel archival sources and shows how Ottoman-era Copts used different spaces-festivals, pilgrimages, church pulpits-to articulate their social, political, and spiritual concerns. This is the first study of its kind and it serves as a welcomed reminder that the Coptic historical perspective, long marginalized in the scholarship, adds a lot to our understanding of the early modern Middle East."
-- Gawdat Gabra, Visiting Professor of Coptic Studies, Claremont Graduate University
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Coptic Christianity in Ottoman Egypt represents a refreshing new trend in scholarship on Christians and Jews in Muslim-majority societies. Rather than depicting non-Muslims as either passive beneficiaries of Muslim tolerance or victims of Muslim persecution, Armanios makes Christians the agents of history. Utilizing an impressive array of Coptic writings to narrate how Copts formed a Christian ethos, Armanios contributes to our understanding of early modern Egyptian religion."
-- Marc David Baer, author of
Honored by the Glory of Islam: Conversion and Conquest in Ottoman Europe "In this important study, Febe Armanios illuminates Coptic religious life in the Ottoman era by analyzing martyr cults, festivals, pilgrimage, and sermons. Tensions between lay leaders and clergy, and efforts to cultivate relations with Muslim rulers, foster Coptic identity and piety, and defend against Catholic proselytizing provide much-needed context for understanding Coptic history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries."
-- Kenneth M. Cuno, Associate Professor of History, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Coptic christianity in Ottoman Egypt provides a rigorous yet richly imaginative analysis of Egypt's coptic community in the early modern period."--
David Coleman, Eastern Kentucky University"The author's remarkable study contributes to clarify the complexity of Muslim-Christian relations and of the internal dynamics of the Coptic community not only in the Ottoman period but also in contemporary Egypt."--
The Catholic Historical Review"Short, eloquent, and well-researched...This book is a wonderful contribution to multiple fields of scholarship and should be warmly welcomed."--
American Historical Review"A fascinating and important contribution to Ottoman Egyptian history, Coptic history, and the history of minorities under Muslim rule."--
Journal of the American Academy of Religion