DBId: 1025
Entry author: Asaph Ben Tov
Node type: Text
De Mohammedi furto sententiarum scripturae sacrae liber unus. In quo mohammedana religio funditus evertitur
De Mohammedi furto sententiarum scripturae sacrae
On Muhammad’s theft of teachings from Holy Scripture (in a single book), in which the Mohammedan religion is thoroughly vanquished
Latin
1711
Treatise
Prose
Academic / Scientific
Polemics against Islam
This treatise follows an earlier work by Schwartz on literary plagiarism (De Plagio litarario, 1706), where Muhammad’s borrowings from Judaeo-Christian Scriptures are mentioned in passing as a case in point. The work itself is highly polemical. Muhammad is portrayed, as often before in Christian polemics, as an impostor. According to Schwatz, his access to the Bible enabled him to “steal” snippets of true wisdom and present them as a new revelation. Muhammad ,we are told, could get away with such plagiarism, due to what the author believes to have been the scarcity of any knowledge of Scripture in the Arabian Peninsula at the time. This polemical work also betrays a very close reading of the Qur’an (though not necessarily in the original as Schwartz claims). The argument of borrowing from Scripture would take on an intriguing new significance in Schwartz’s Specimen philosophiae orientalis antiquissimae ex Corano (1715).
Asaph Ben Tov