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Sinan: A Muslim Converts in Elizabethan England

Monday 11 February 2013, 8.00PM

Speaker(s): Dr Matthew Dimmock (Sussex)

Please join us for a series of public lectures exploring the findings and implications of our research "Cultural Encounters: Travel, Religion, and Identity in the Early Modern World"

Agnese world map, 1544

The years between 1550 and 1700 saw the birth of our modern world. The rumbling legacy of the Reformations shaped the social and political landscape of Europe, and drove evangelical missions at home and abroad. Thanks to the trading influence and military prowess of the Ottoman Empire, Europeans were confronted by strange ideas, novel societies, and unfamiliar faiths, as well as sophisticated mathematical and scientific knowledge. Voyages of business and exploration brought travellers into contact with the peoples of the Far East, South Asia, and the Americas.
This lecture series will roam across early modern Europe and beyond, investigating the effects of these turbulent centuries, and their centrality to our own social and cultural inheritance.See further information about the series at: http://www.york.ac.uk/crems/conversion/news/publiclectures/

Lectures will take place in the wonderful surroundings of the York Medical Society, on Stonegate, and will start at 20.00. Refreshments will be provided, and all are welcome to attend.
For directions please see: http://yorkmedsoc.org/how-to-find-us.html

Dr Matthew Dimmock, School of English, Sussex University

My lecture will focus on the baptising of a Muslim that took place in London in 1586, the first event of its kind. I will use the ceremony and surrounding circumstances to consider wider questions about the nature of conversion and about early modern English attitudes to ‘Mahometanism’. At the core of the lecture is a dilemma – when the English authorities were confronted with this individual and his desire to convert, what did they do? How might one go about organising the first baptism of a Muslim in Elizabethan England?

Location: York Medical Society, 23 Stonegate, York

Admission: Public Lecture, free and unticketed

Email: conversionnarratives@york.ac.uk