3 resultados para Islamic Factor
em Biblioteca Digital de la Universidad Católica Argentina
Resumo:
Resumen: El artículo enfoca la situación de los cristianos del Medio Oriente y trata de formular su destino colectivo en términos de “la condición cristiana”. El argumento central sostiene que la tragedia de la condición cristiana en el Medio Oriente se explica por la crisis del Estado secular provocada tanto por el factor del Islam, así como las intervenciones de potencias europeas desde las cruzadas hasta el período colonial e intervención militar de Estados Unidos en Irak en 2003. En este sentido, la actualidad no es la repetición de la historia, sino la continuidad del mismo padrón de inequidad en distintos períodos históricos dentro de las sociedades musulmanas y el intervencionismo externo/occidental que, tanto en el pasado como en la actualidad, muy pocas veces se ha preocupado por el destino de la cristiandad del Medio Oriente.
Resumo:
Abstract: During extensive salvage excavations carried out during the years 2004-2008 in a large Early Islamic industrial area at the vicinities of Ramla, in Central Israel, an unparalleled industrial device was unearthed. The star-shaped, soil embedded installation, whose lower part was preserved, consisted of a central pottery jar surrounded by five minor jars, linked by ceramic pipes. Evidence of heat was observed mainly around the central vessel, and metal hollow cones perforated in the tip were found inside the surrounding jars. Although the manufacturing procedures and operation techniques of the installation are not completely clear, it is proposed that the installation is part of an industrial workshop or an alchemy laboratory. Both industry and alchemy were well-developed during the Early Islamic period and very often closely related, to the point that sometimes it is difficult to distinguish between them. The identification proposed is based on comparisons with tools described in literary sources, and somewhat later drawings and etchings. Circumstantial ceramic evidence was found, as well as the proximity of a bathhouse whose guests could have been the consumers of perfumes and unguents seem to reinforce this possibility. Due to the poor state of preservation of the device and the lack of available comparisons, the identification proposed here is tentative, and future research coupled with eventual new discoveries is needed in order to clarify this matter.