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OverviewIn this compelling narrative, Bernard Heyberger relates the fascinating history of Hindiyya 'Ujaymi, a highly charismatic eighteenth-century mystic of sinister repute. Heyberger makes a careful study of Hindiyya's life from earliest childhood, with a detailed picture of her formative years in the eighteenth century Christian community of Aleppo, the domestic reality of which is little known, exploring the influences she would have experienced. He leads us through her spiritual development under the direction of the Jesuits, her determination to found a new religious order, and the tragic history of its collapse in a welter of paranoia and persecution. Heyberger also reveals the tensions and complex rivalries at play around Hindiyya between Rome, the Jesuits, and Eastern tribes, which were also beset by feuds and alliances. He makes extensive use of a wide variety of sources, from Hindiyya's own writings to reports from her confessors and Roman inquisitors, to shed light upon the Hindiyya affair. 'Hindiyya, Mystic and Criminal' relates the history of a woman of inflexible power of will and great charisma, who managed to move beyond the circumscribed world of her girlhood and realise what she believed to be her destiny. It will be of great interest to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of an affair which has been long obscured by contradictory reports, or to those interested in eighteenth-century Maronite Christianity and its complex interactions with the authority of Rome. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Renee Champion , Bernard HeybergerPublisher: James Clarke & Co Ltd Imprint: James Clarke & Co Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.518kg ISBN: 9780227173886ISBN 10: 0227173880 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 28 March 2013 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of Contents"Introduction PART ONE An Aleppine Childhood (1720-1746) 1. Christians of Aleppo 2. Aleppine Women 3. Hindiyya and her Family 4. The Devout Cultural Model 5. Hindiyya and her Confessor PART TWO Saint and Founder (1746-1753) 6. The Lebanon of the Maronites 7. Trails of Consecration 8. The Politics of Sanctity 9. The Convent and the ""World"" 10. Hindiyya, Mystical Author PART THREE From Saint to Demon (1753-1777) 11. Disturbing Deviance 12. First Alarms 13. The Hell of the Convent 14. The Tyrannical ""Mystery of Union"" PART FOUR The Denouement 15. Hell Opens 16. Tragic Performances 17. The Hour of the Secular Arm 18. After the Tagedy: Denial 19. Epilogue: Hindiyya in Memory Conclusion Notes Sources Bibliography Index"ReviewsHindiyya is a consummate piece of historical writing that combines biographical narrative, long-term structure analysis and good oldfashioned murder mystery. ... Hindiyya breaks new ground as a study of religious deviance and mentalite in an early modern Levantine society. Stefan Winter, in MIT Electronic Journal of Middle East Studies It is a book that will be valuable to those wishing to understand more of the Maronite religious heritage and Lebanese religious history, and to those concerned with the psychological aberrations of claimed spiritual experience. Geoffrey Rowell, in Church Times, 11 October 2013 It will be of great interest to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of an affair which has been long obscured by contradictory reports, or to those interested in eighteenth-century Maronite Christianity and its complex interactions with the authority of Rome. Theological Book Review , Vol 25, No 2 [...]a solid work of historical research, culling the mines of the archives of the Propaganda Fide in Rome as well as the Maronite Patriach in Bkirki. The bibliography is well laid out, noting workings on local history and culture of the Maronites [...] as well as contemporary social and gender studies focusing upon the Western and Oriental Catholic traditions [...] Hindiyya, Mystic and Criminal is an extremely important resource in the area of Middle East Christianity, which reveals the complicated relationships between the Oriental Catholic Churches and Rome. David D. Grafton, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol 46, (2014) This is a thoroughly and meticulously researched, documented, and well-written book. It is a masterpiece that employs a multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary social science and humanities contextual approach, which makes it an academic edifice, a monumental work. It is rich in historiography; it contains a range of impressive primary sources and archival material as well as a watershed spectrum of references arranged thematically. It is a living, picturesque piece of social history. Heyberger has encyclopedic knowledge and seems to be a philologist who has apparently mastered at least six languages: Arabic, English, French, German, Italian and Latin. -Joseph Alagha, Bibliotheca Orientalis, LXXII, No 3-4, May-August 2015 Lebanon covers an area roughly just the size of Wales, yet its divisions--ethnics, confessional, political--often seem as infinitely complex as a fractal. Bernard Heyberger's fascinating Hindiyya, a real-life The Name of the Rose, offers evidence that this toxic state of affairs is nothing new to Levant. -Clement Grene, The Expository Times, Vol. 127 No. 6, March 2016 'It is a book that will be valuable to those wishing to understand more of the Maronite religious heritage and Lebanese religious history, and to those concerned with the psychological aberrations of claimed spiritual experience.' Geoffrey Rowell, Church Times, 11 October 2013 Author InformationBernard Heyberger is a Professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris. At present he is the Director of the Institut d'étude de l'Islam et des Sociétés du Monde Musulman at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales. He has lived several times in Syria, Lebanon and Italy and is the author of several publications on the social history of the Eastern Christians in the Ottoman era. 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