Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The Ideology of Silence: Prejudice and Pragmatism on the Medieval Religious Frontier
Author(s): Charles J. Halperin
Source: Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Jul., 1984), pp. 442-466
Published by: Cambridge University Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/178551 .
Accessed: 18/03/2011 09:28
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless
you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you
may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use.
Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at .
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cup. .
Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed
page of such transmission.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Cambridge University Press and Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History are collaborating with
JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Comparative Studies in Society and History.
http://www.jstor.org
The Ideology of Silence: Prejudice
and Pragmatism on the Medieval
Religious Frontier
CHARLES J. HALPERIN
Indianapolis, Indiana
442
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 443
The Christian reconquista of Spain from Islam led to the creation of the
thirteenth-centurycrusaderkingdom of Valencia, the best-knownexample of
the intensive relations between Catholic and Moor in medieval Spain.4 King
frontiersocieties, to my knowledge, never involved the same people, but that is very difficult to
imagine since religion figured so heavily in the self-consciousness of medieval social groups.
I am using ethnic and people here merely as generic terms without a specific conceptual
content, largely to avoid dealing with the question of medieval nations and nationalism.
Recent researchby social anthropologistssuggests that ethnic groups develop not in isolation
but in interaction with other ethnic groups. See Frederick Barth, "Introduction," in Ethnic
Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organizationof Culture Difference, FrederickBarth, ed.
(Boston, 1969), 9-38.
3 Owen Lattimoredeveloped the concept of the frontieras a zone to describerelationsbetween
the Chinese and their Inner Asian nomadic neighbors. See Owen Lattimore, "China and the
Barbarians,"in Empire in the East, Joseph Barnes, ed. (GardenCity, New York, 1934), 3-36;
idem, Inner Asian Frontiers of China (Boston, 1962); idem, Studies in Frontier History. Col-
lected Papers, 1928-1958 (London, 1962), especially "The Frontier in History," 469-91.
The dynamics of Inner Asian empire building, in which a pastoralnomadic people acquired
sedentarysubjects, overlap the processes of religious frontierconquestanalyzedin this essay, but
demand separatetreatment.
4 Robert Ignatius Bums, S.J.: "Journey from Islam. Incipient Cultural Transition in the
ConqueredKingdomof Valencia (1240-1280)," Speculum, 35:3 (1960), 337-56; "Social Riots
on the Christian-MoslemFrontier:Thirteenth-CenturyValencia," AmericanHistorical Review,
66:3 (1960-1961), 778-800; "The Friars of the Sack in Valencia," Speculum, 36:3 (1961),
435-38; "The Organization of a Medieval CathedralCommunity: The Chapter of Valencia
(1238-1280)," Church History, 31:1 (1962), 14-23; "The Parish as a FrontierInstitutionin
Thirteenth-CenturyValencia," Speculum, 37:2 (1962), 244-51; "Les hospitales del reino de
Valencia en el sigle xiii," Annuario de estudios mediaevalis, 2 (1965), 135-54 [English-lan-
guage summary, 751-52]; "A Medieval Income Tax: The Tithe in the Thirteenth-Century
444 CHARLES J. HALPERIN
adopted the true faith. During this unfortunateand, it was expected, brief
period, Muslims were forbiddento insult Christianityor interferewith Chris-
tian missionary activities, two almost impossible caveats from the point of
view of Muslim piety.6 In practice the distinction between persuasion and
coercion often became blurred.In any event, the Catholicpowers of Valencia
rarely invoked tradition, necessity, or the carefully constructedniceties of
canon law; silence better served to mitigate the contradictionbetween the
obvious demands of crusaderethos and prejudice and the requirementsof
everyday life in Spain.
"Feudal" norms played more of a role in facilitating social compromise
between Christiansand Moors than has been creditedto them. Social elitism
lent a much-soughtrespectability,elegance, and grace to the otherwisepoten-
tially tawdry process of surrenderand negotiating a modus vivendi. Honest
friendships, certainly social respect and intimacy, could develop in such
circumstances. But such social interactioncould not breach the wall of re-
ligious exclusivism. A Christianmight admirea Moor for his moralqualities,
but only with the qualificationthat such qualitiesexisted despite, not because
of, his adherence to Islam. The decency of individual Muslims could not
influence the prevailingcontemptfor Islam as a religion. It was not necessary
to articulatethis ubiquitousprejudicein every social context, yet it set abso-
lute limits upon the viability of social understandingin Spain.
Religion also restrictedculturaland intellectualcontact between Christian
and Muslim. The demandsof imposing a new political orderand establishing
an ecclesiastical structurein thirteenth-centuryValencia left little time for
cultural activity, but Spain as a whole served as the intermediarybetween
CatholicEuropeand the world of Islam in culture. Evaluationsof the impact
of Arabic learningupon ChristianEuropevary, yet all analyses of the subject
attest to the obstacles created by religious attitudes. The Arabs perhapscon-
tributedsomewhat to medieval Christianart and architecture,but their influ-
ence here was greatest in the minor arts and crafts, such as tapestries, which
had the least to do with religious ideology. High culture evolved around
religion, and the taint of infidel Islam precluded very much borrowing or
influence. Claims have been advanced for the connection between Arabic
poetry and that of Provence, or even for Muslim antecedentsof Dante, but
they remaininconclusive or worse. The most-cited area of Arab influence on
Christiancultureis in the transmissionof classical Greek learning, especially
philosophyand science. The ambiguitiesand difficulties encompassedin that
process require more emphasis than they have received. Defenders of re-
ligious orthodoxysuspectedthose intellectualswho studiedthe paganphiloso-
phy, and even more so since they thereby exposed themselves to the per-
nicious influence of Islamic intermediaries. Christian Aristotelians came
6 FrederickH. Russell, The Just War in the Middle Ages (Cambridge, 1975).
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 449
basid; and the Turkicphase, underthe Seljuks, then the Turkmen,and finally
the Ottomans. Within these subdivisions of Byzantino-Muslimcontact are
abidingelements of the patternof Christian-Muslimrelationsfound in Spain
and elsewhere on the medieval religious frontier.8
With astonishingspeed the Arabtribesmenconqueredthe richestprovinces
of the Byzantine empire-Syria, Palestine, and Egypt. Naturallythey turned
to indigenous institutionsin orderto govern their newly acquiredterritories.
The Umayyad dynasty has with some merit been labelled neo-Byzantine,
since it copied many of the accoutrementsof Byzantinebureaucraticautocra-
cy: taxes, weights and measures, chancelleryand treasurypractices, the Cop-
tic or Syriac Christianscribes to maintainthe accountbooks, cities, garrisons,
administrativeunits and divisions, coinage, granaries, corvee, the roads,
postal system, vocabularyof agriculture,commerce, crafts, music, law, im-
perial palaces and their decoration (despite the Muslim prohibitionagainst
pictorialrepresentationof the humanform), monuments,ceremonial, imperi-
al rescripts, even rhetoric and reasoning. ChristianSemitic (not Greek) bu-
reaucraticcadresran most governmentalmachinery.In short, Byzantinepolit-
ical, economic, administrative,legal, and artisticinfluences on the Umayyad
dynasty strongly shaped its organizationand functioning.
The new Muslim empire of the Umayyads owed much of its structureand
ethos to the ChristianByzantine empire it had displaced. The Arabs had no
previous experience in controlling such impressive agriculturaland urban
areas;they had little choice but to imitateand continuethe pre-Arabpractice.
Theirneophytestatusalone, however, does not constitutea complete explana-
tion of their imitativeproclivities;the SpanishCatholics who conqueredVal-
encia also preferred to use Moorish institutions instead of importing and
imposing those they utilized in otherregions of Spain. The demographicsand
politics of frontierconquest dictatedthat it was considerablymore practicalto
prolong the institutions to which the majority of one's subjects were ac-
customed than to restructuresociety and government from scratch from a
position of numerical inferiority. The use of ethnoreligious intermediaries
softened the process somewhat; just as the Spanish Catholics in Valencia
8
Speros Vryonis, Jr.: "Isadore Glabas and the Turkish 'Devshirme,'" Speculum, 31:3
(1956), 433-43; "Byzantine Circus Factions and the Islamic FutuwwaOrganizations(Neaniai,
Fityan, Ahdath)," ByzantinischeZeitschrift, 58:1 (1965), 45-59; "Seljuk Gulams and Ottoman
Devshirmes," Der Islam, 41 (1965), 224-52; "Byzantium and Islam, Seventh-Seventeenth
Centuries," East European Quarterly, 2:3 (1968), 205-40; "The Byzantine Legacy and Ot-
toman Forms," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 23-24 (1969-70), 253-308; "Byzantine Attitudes
towardIslam duringthe Late Middle Ages," Greek, Romanand ByzantineStudies, 12:2 (1971),
263-86; The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the Process of Islamizationfrom
the Eleventh to the Fifteenth Centuries (Berkeley, 1971); "Religious Change and Continuityin
the Balkans and Anatolia from the Fourteenthto the SixteenthCenturies," in Islam and Cultural
Change, Vryonis, ed., 127-40; and "Nomadization and Islamization in Asia Minor,"
DumbartonOaks Papers, 29 (1975), 41-71. Also, Anthony Bryer, "Greeks and Tirkmen: The
Pontic Exception," DumbartonOaks Papers, 29 (1975), 113-48.
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 45I
continued the patternset with the Sassanids, or by Rome and the Parthians
before that. Common sense and necessity justified such behavior; neither
rationalefound widespreadarticulation.
Neither provincial nor central pragmaticattitudestowardthe Arab empire
could, however, intrudeinto the official Byzantineview of Islam. According
to ByzantineChristianreligious prejudice,Islam was a pseudo-religion,idol-
atrous and polytheistic, which advocated sex and violence, practiceda silly
ritual, could claim no miracles, and had been sired by a false prophet.It was
legalistic and based upon a scripturewrittenin the wrong literaryform. Islam
as a religion had nothingto be said for it.10 When Muslim doctorsof theology
deigned to discuss Christianityat all, as in religious debates, they began by
attackingthe Byzantines as polytheists because of the doctrineof the Trinity,
and proceeded from there. Pragmaticcooperationhad no impact on the im-
ages Christianityand Islam held of each other.
Seljuk and Turkmen pressure upon the Byzantine citizenry of Anatolia
increasedunderthe Ottomans, who slowly annexed Asia Minor, Turkicizing
and Islamizing its population.I Deprived of their fleeing aristocracy and
churchhierarchy,the Greek and Hellenized non-Greekpopulationconverted
to Islam for the usual varied reasons:economic advantage,religious convic-
tion, social mobility, aesthetics, fear, and duress. The mystic, missionary,
and activist dervish orders played a central role in stimulating apostasy,
because dervish Islam drew heavily from the indigenous folk religion. It
retainedthe holy men, holy trees, holy sites, and magical practicesof Anat-
olia which theological purists of both sides derided as superstition.A Chris-
tian monk who became a disciple of a dervish holy man illustratesthe degree
of religious eclecticism achieved in Anatolia. The receptivityof dervish Islam
to the folk religion which preceded even Christianityin Anatolia no doubt
facilitated its spread.
Trebizondremainedimmuneto the processes of Islamicizationin Anatolia.
Safe behindits mountainlittoral,the political and ecclesiasticalelite remained
in place. It assiduously cultivated the Turkic language, intermarriage,com-
merce with the nomads, and ecological cooperation:the same pastures ser-
viced nomadand farmerin differentseason. As a result, Christianitysurvived
and Greek-speakingOrthodoxChristianscontinued to inhabitthe region.
The nomadic Ottomansenjoyed the status of ghazi, warriorsof the jihad.
They carriedthe holy war of Islam into the heartof CentralEurope.12But in
10 John Meyendorff, "Byzantine Views of Islam," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 18 (1964),
113-32.
11 Claude Cahen. Pre-Ottoman Turkey. A General Survey of the Material and Spiritual
Cultureand History c. 1071-1330, J. Jones-Williams,trans.(New York, 1968), portraysa much
lower level of Hellenization in Asia Minor before the Ottoman conquest than does Speros
Vryonis.
12 Gy. Kaldy-Nagy, "The Holy War (jihad) in the First Centuriesof the OttomanEmpire,"
Harvard UkrainianStudies, 3/4 (1979-80) (Eucharisterion-Pritsak Festschrift), pt. 1, 467-73,
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 453
castles and constructionsthat they built were in the Romanesque style and
with as few concessions to the new topographyas possible. Insufficientwater
made moats impractical, but little more than some local masonry dis-
tinguished French crusader castles from those in France. In warfare the
crusaderslearnedfrom the Arabsto make betteruse of theirown light cavalry
and infantryand to stay inside their castles until the enemy departedinsteadof
tryingto breaksieges, but no self-respectingFrenchnoble would ever draw a
bow, and crusadersiegecraft derived from Byzantine and Armenianas much
as Muslim practice. For protectionfrom the sun some crusadersaddeda cloth
cover over their helmets, not to be confused with the keffiyah. The French
lived in their cities and castles and left the Muslim agriculturalpopulation
alone. Local rais governed the villages, and the absentee Frenchlords exer-
cised control through French- and Arabic-speakingSyrian Christian inter-
mediaries, who saved the Frenchthe troubleof learningArabic. This practice
parallelsthe use of Jews in Valencia and Semitic Christiansin the Umayyad
empire. The crusadersleft local taxes, a mixture of Byzantine and Muslim
levies, in place. Early crusadercoinage crudely imitatedArabic models, but
later the Papacy objected to the "intolerable" phenomenonof Christianslo-
gans in Arabic on the coinage of a crusaderkingdom. (One wonders if the
papacy took similar note of the less prevalent Arabic-languagecoinage in
Valencia.) Perhaps the lot of the Arab peasant improved, since without a
demesne the French lords did not impose corvee, but this materialameliora-
tion of the tax load providedthe Arabswith small solace for the humiliationof
living underan infidel government.The Frenchhad no choice but to adoptthe
local diet, since importationof food was out of the question. The Muslim
environmentoffered much in the way of creaturecomforts. Although some
Frenchmanagedto take advantageof the carpetsand wallhangings,baths and
aquaducts, sewage systems, bed and table linen, porcelain dishes, soaps,
dyes, spices, doctors and medicines, and even black slaves and eunuchs, this
Mediterraneanlifestyle attractedeven fewer Catholiclords in Palestinethan it
did in Valencia. The French transplantedthe Frenchway of life to Palestine
and lived within it in the midst of the Muslim world.
The Muslim world stimulated no intellectual or cultural curiosity in the
French crusaders.In general the French in Jerusalemdevoted few efforts to
higherculture. Romances and epics aboutthe crusaderstates were composed
in the West, and crusaderlaw came from Europe. Philosophyand science did
not exist.18 The refractoryattitudeof the crusadersinhibitedeven the most
obvious forms of artistic borrowing. New crusaderart works slavishly imi-
tated French models; except for the very Byzantine mosaics and illuminated
manuscripts,depictions of the Orient in French crusaderart followed Euro-
pean fantasy, not local reality. The crusadersbuilt Romanesquechurchesand
18 Steven Runciman,A History of the Crusades (Cambridge, 1954), III, 489-92.
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 457
castles, employing local symbols only on some ceramics. If not even climate
could induce the French to lessen the distinction between rulers and ruled in
clothing-so that no Christianwoman, the Palestiniansun notwithstanding,
ever wore full veil or trousers-then how much more rigorously did the
French avoid contact with the Muslims and Muslim religious culture.
No more than a dozen unavoidablyessential Arabic words found their way
into the French vocabulary. Missionaries, as in Spain, could and did learn
Arabic, but the majority of the French nobility did not, less because of an
absence of schools, universities, or creative scholars than the simple lack of
desire to do so. The use of multilingual intermediarieshelped sustain this
facet of social and culturalexclusivism.
The reality of crusaderappreciationof Muslim military skill and chivalry
should not be dismissed because the relationshipbetween Richardthe Lion-
Heartedand Saladin has been romanticizedin grade-B crusaderepic movies;
such aristocraticmartial and social compatibilitycould hardly eliminate the
Christian-Muslimwarfarewhich broughtabout occasions for its exercise. It
did, however, mitigate some of the harshnessof war for noble enemies, as
crusaderstreatednoble Muslim captives with respectand permittedransom,19
and Muslim aristocratsreciprocatedthe courtesy with Christianknights. Par-
allels to Valencia or the Byzantino-Muslimfrontierdepicted in the Digenis
Akritas spring readily to mind.
The various crusaderstates often spent more time fighting each other than
making war on the infidel. Christian diplomacy often demanded alliances
with some Muslims against others, not to mention against other Christians.
One alliance representsthe most extremecase of such religious flexibility: the
Assassins paid tribute to the Templars, and ratherthan see this convenient
arrangementaltered, the Templars ambushed envoys sent by the king of
Jerusalemto convertthe Assassins to Christianity.The power of the Assassins
forced the Hospitalers and most Outremerestates to reach agreementswith
them at one time or another;the same applied to Muslim states who viewed
the sect as heretics. The kingdom of Jerusalem,like Valencia, had its Muslim
fief-holders and some Muslim mercenaries. The use of Muslim soldiers or
allies aroused the severest objections in the waves of fanatic crusadingmi-
grants who brought their unadulteratedprejudices fresh from Europe. The
crusaderkingdom could not survive without reserve manpower, but the new
recruitsrefused to understandthat the military weakness of their side made
adroit dealings with the Muslims crucial.
William of Tyre personifies the conflict in crusaderranks over relations
with the Muslim states. A pullano or poulain, i.e., hybrid, born of mixed
Italianand Frenchancestryin Jerusalemand well educatedin Europeat Paris
21 Cf. David
Jacoby, "The Encounterof Two Societies: WesternConquerorsin the Pelapon-
nesus after the FourthCrusade," American Historical Review, 78:4 (1973), 873-906.
22 A. N. Nasonov,
Mongoly i Rus' (Istoriia Tatarskoipolitiki na Rusi) (Moscow-Leningrad,
1940); Berthold Spuler, Die Goldene Horde. Die Mongolen in Russland, 2d expanded ed.
(Wiesbaden, 1965); B. D. Grekov and A. Iu. Iakubovskii,Zolotaia orda i ee padenie (Moscow-
Leningrad, 1950); George Vernadsky, The Mongols and Russia (New Haven, 1953); Michael
Roublev, "The Scourge of God," RussianHistory, forthcoming;CharlesJ. Halperin,Russia and
the Golden Horde. The Impact of the Mongols on Russian History (Bloomington, Indiana), in
press.
23 G. A.
Fedorov-Davydov, Kochevniki Vostochnoi Evropy pod vlast'iu zoloto-ordynskikh
khanov: Arkheologicheskiepamiatniki (Moscow, 1966); idem, Obshchestvennvistroi Zolotoi
Ordy (Moscow, 1973).
24 CharlesJ. Halperin, "Russia in the Mongol Empirein ComparativePerspective," Harvard
Journal of Asiatic Studies, 43:1 (June 1983), 239-61.
460 CHARLES J. HALPERIN
sion and selectivity, but neitheractivity accords well with the depictionof the
Tatarsin Russian sources as blood-sucking infidels.
The economic burden which Mongol rule imposed on the Russians was
partiallyoffset in two ways. First, Russian princes who participatedin joint
Russo-Tatarmilitary campaigns shared in the booty. Second, Russians par-
ticipatedin and profited from the expansion of internationalcommerce under
the Pax Mongolica. In Russia the Mongols reroutedthe fur trade to extract
greater revenue; as a result, Muscovite and Ustiug merchants, ratherthan
Novgorodian, reaped the benefits. Russians and Tatars employed some re-
gions of the southeasternfrontier,on the Riazan' border,for both agriculture
and nomadism, which duplicatedthe ecological symbiosis of GreekandTurk-
men in Trebizond. Booty and commerce mitigated the economic drain of
Mongol rule in Russia.28
Presumably,those Russian princes, nobles, officials, merchants,and cler-
ics who dealt frequently with the Horde had the greatest incentive to learn
Tatar,the Turkicdialect which became dominantin the Horde. At first, some
baptized bilingual Kipchaks served as translators,although this practice did
not equal in scope or significance the use of ethnic intermediarieselsewhere
on the medieval religious frontier. Some Arabic names and slogans found
their way onto bilingual Russian coins, paralleling Valencia and Jerusalem.
The fifteenth-centuryTverianmerchantAfanasii Nikitin so mastereda kind of
orientalpatois of Turkic, Persian, and Arabicthathe unconsciouslyslipped in
and out of it in composing his travelogue about India.29Bilingualism must
have been more prevalentthan our scanty sources admit.
The Russianprinces and nobles sharedwith the Tatarsa sense of aristocrat-
ic martialchivalry. If the Tatarshad not been noble opponents, there would
have been no glory for the Russiansin tryingto defeat them. Captiveson both
sides were sometimes treatedwith respect. The "feudal" ethos which crossed
the religious and ecological frontierbetween Christiansedentaristand Muslim
nomad found predictableexpression in an epic poem, the Zadonshchina.30
Forms of chivalry thus influenced social relations between Christians and
Muslims from Spain to the Balkans and Anatolia to the Middle East and the
Russian steppe.
The Russians acquiredan intimatefamiliaritywith the geography, person-
nel, society, mores, and customs of the Horde, an expertise equal to that of
28 Thomas S. Noonan, "Russia's EasternTrade, 1150-1350: The
Archeological Evidence,"
ArchivumEurasiae Medii Aevi, forthcoming; Janet Martin, "The Land of Darkness and the
Golden Horde. The Fur Trade under the Mongols. XIII-XIV Centuries," Cahiers du monde
russe et sovietique, 19:4 (1978), 401-22.
29 Afanasii Nitikin, Khozhenie za tri moria Afanasiia Nikitina 1466-1472 gg., 2d ed.
(Moscow, 1958).
30 Povesti o Kulikovskoibitvy, M. N. Tikhomirov, V. F. Rzhiga, and L. A. Dmitriev, eds.
(Moscow, 1959), 9-17. The most popularliterarygenre for the expression of frontierchivalric
relations was the epic poem, hence El Cid, La Chanson de Roland, Digenis Akritas, and the
Zadonshchina.
462 CHARLES J. HALPERIN
King James of Valencia about the Moors. They had no choice but to acquire
such knowledge, since political survival in dealing with the Horde depended
on it.31 The Russians fully masteredMongol political concepts and ideology.
They utilized such Mongol terms as orda (horde)and ulus (people-state)with
ease.32 Most important,they understoodthe single overridingpolitical princi-
ple upon which the Mongol,empirerested, the blood legitimacy of the clan of
Chinggis Khan. In literary works intended for a native audience, Russian
bookmen manipulatedthat principle to justify Russian policies toward the
Tatars.33The Muscovites may even have modelled their dynastic concept
upon that of the Chingissids.34 Despite religious prejudice, the Russians
developed a comprehensive,pragmaticexpertiseand even ideological fluency
in Horde affairs.
Thatthe Mongols did not influence Russianhigh culturewas attributableto
Russian religion practice, and not to a sense of the superiorityof Russian
culture to that of the "barbarian"nomads. Horde culture cannot be called
inferior;Sarai, the Hordecapital, with its aquaducts,caravansaries,medresses
(religious schools), mosques, and foreign merchants'quarters,rivalled any
medieval Russian city. The Golden Horde enjoyed a respectable Muslim
religiousculture,which is precisely why the Russianscould not borrowfromit.
The Russiansdid not seek betterways to build a mosque or commentupon the
Koran.The high cultureof the Hordewas untouchable,religiouslytabu, to the
Russians.35Texts of orientalliteraturewhich reachedRussia before or during
the Mongol period had already been sanitized, i.e., Christianized,and it is
doubtfulthatthe Russianseven knew of theirinfidel origin.36As elsewhere on
the medievalreligiousfrontier,those areasof life closest to religion, such as the
Russian high culture, most resisted infidel influence.
The Muscovites could not discard all elements of pragmaticrelations with
the Mongols afterthe overthrowof the "TatarYoke" in 1480. Muscovy still
31 CharlesJ. Halperin, "Know Thy Enemy: Medieval Russian Familiaritywith the Mongols
of the Golden Horde," Jahrbiicherfur Geschichte Osteuropas, 30:2 (1982), 161-75.
32 CharlesJ. Halperin, "Tsarev ulus: Russia in the Golden Horde," Cahiers du monde russe
et sovietique, 23:2 (April-June1982), 257-63.
33 Michael Cheriavsky, "Khan or Basileus: An Aspect of Russian Medieval Political Theo-
ry," Journal of the History of Ideas, 20:4 (1959), 459-76; CharlesJ. Halperin, "A" Chingissid
Saint of the RussianOrthodoxChurch:The 'Life of Peter, Tsarevichof the Horde,' Canadian-
AmericanSlavic Studies, 9:3 (1975), 324-35; idem, "The Russian Land and the Russian Tsar:
The Emergence of Muscovite Ideology, 1380-1408," Forschungen zur osteuropdischen
Geschichte, 23 (1976), 7-103; idem, "The Defeat and Death of Batu," Russian History,
10:1 (1983), 50-65; idem, "The Tatar Yoke and Tatar Oppression," Russia Mediaevalis,
forthcoming;idem, Russia and the Tatar Yoke(Columbus, Ohio), in press.
34 Michael Cherniavsky, "Ivan the Terribleand the Iconographyof the KremlinCathedralof
ArchangelMichael," Russian History, 2:1 (1975), 3-28.
35 Charles J. Halperin, "Medieval Myopia and the Mongol Period of Russian History,"
Russian History, 5:2 (1978), 188-91.
36 D. S. Likhachev, Poetika drevnerusskoiliteraturv (Leningrad, 1967), 11-13, identifies
this patternbut explains it differently.
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 463
had to deal with the successor states of the Golden Horde; annexation of
Kazan' and Astrakhan' waited until the 1550s, and of the Crimea, which
became a vassal of the Ottomans, until the late eighteenth century. Ching-
gisids continued to enjoy high status in sixteenth-centuryMuscovy, the by
then Russianpostal service served neitherpork nor alcohol to Muslims, and a
Muslim could swear an oath on a Koran kept in the Kremlin, a juridical
convenience common in Valencia. Muslim envoys prayed daily to Allah in
the capital of the Orthodox Christian empire of Muscovy. However, the
growing social and political pressures of Russian centralizationgenerated
tensions which found their outlet in religious and ethnic antagonism and
demands for homogeneity. A virulently anti-Muslimsentiment arose in the
militantwing of the Russian OrthodoxChurch,which producedan aggressive
missionary policy in annexed Kazan'. (This novel chauvinism and
xenophobia was also directed against Jews.) The development of an early
modern nation-statein Muscovy37 thus producedreactions against elements
of the medieval frontierakin to those in fifteenth-centurySpain, the Abbasid
reaction to the Umayyads, and the later Ottomanreversal of early Ottoman
practices. Like the Ottoman empire, the Russian empire contained such an
ever increasingMuslim populationthat nothing on the orderof an expulsion
policy ever became implemented. During the Westernizingreforms of Peter
the Great at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth
century, Russia discarded its Mongol institutions. During the seventeenth
century, Russian involvementwith the steppe in generaldeclined and Russian
need for steppe expertise greatly diminished. Therefore, Russia's need for
pragmaticrelations with the Mongols outlastedMongol sovereigntyby about
a century, after which the pressuresof prejudicereassertedthemselves with
new and greaterpotency.
No medieval Russian source of the Mongol period comments on the Rus-
sian familiarity with the steppe, or explains why Russians cultivated such
knowledge of the infidel. Russian Orthodox Christiancanon law frowned
upon socializing with the infidels, but Russian priests could accompanythe
nomadic Horde to provide for the religious needs of Russian faithful; why
Russiansjoined in nomadicjourneys with the Hordewent unmentioned.Only
the Mongol name betrays the Horde origin of Mongol institutionsborrowed
by the Muscovites. No medieval Russian merchanthad a kind word to say
about steppe merchants, and the chronicles treatedintermarriagegingerly. A
chronicle would criticize a rival Russian prince for employing Tatarmilitary
auxiliaries or assistance, but if the chronicler's princely patron relied upon
Horde military or political allies, this policy escaped critique. In a late-
thirteenth-centurysermon, the bishop of Vladimir, Serapion, echoes Tacitus
38 E. V. Petukhov,
Serapion Vladimirskii,russkii propovednikXIII veka (St. Petersburg,
1888), Appendix, 13-15.
PREJUDICE AND PRAGMATISM ON RELIGIOUS FRONTIERS 465
nian populations who stood in their way. The Byzantines did assimilate the
Slavic populationsof the Balkans which came completely undertheir control.
Islam, because of the social geography of the regions which it dominated,
manifested greater social and religious toleration than did Christianity,but
even so the Ottomans assimilated the Greek and Armenian populations of
Anatolia. During the early modem period of history, the pressuresof nation
buildingpermittedCatholic Spain and OrthodoxMuscovy to accumulatesuf-
ficient power to alter the quid pro quo with their religious minorities:Spain
expelled the Moors, and Muscovy drastically worsened the situation of its
Muslim Tatarsubjects. When the Abbasids discovered they had less need for
Byzantine officials and institutions than had the Umayyads, they discarded
them; and the Ottomans changed their minds once experience permittedit.
The tendency, proclivity, propensity for religious conformism surfaced in
medieval Christianand Muslim states wheneverit could, and as stronglyas it
could.
Thus the medieval religious frontier suffered a precarious existence. It
functioned during the interim between the initial conquest and the develop-
ment of power sufficient to allow the sentiments of the conquered to be
disregarded,and also in situations where neither side in the struggle had the
ability to eliminate the other. The transienceof the frontierderived from its
intrinsic instability. The very existence of pragmaticrelations with infidels
violated the fundamentaland immutablethrustof the exclusivist religions of
Christianityand Islam.
Only convoluted and excessively qualified theological argumentswere ca-
pable of justifying the kinds of pragmaticrelations which characterizedthe
medieval religious frontier. One could permit religious toleration, but only
without insult to one's own faith. One could conclude truces, but no eternal
peace. Stark necessity vaguely rationalized alliances, commerce, or other
activities of peaceful cooperation. These meticulously constructedconces-
sions to religious toleranceor minimal recognitionsof circumstancesbeyond
one's control rarely intrudeinto the written records of the frontier/conquest
societies, which were supposed to have the greatest need for ideological
guidancein relationswith religious foes. And in neitherChristianitynor Islam
did any theory, no matter how sophistic, ever legitimize the borrowing of
institutionsfrom adherentsof an infidel faith.
The demands of religious prejudicepreventedthe formulationor articula-
tion of any medieval theories genuinely equivalent to modem concepts of
peaceful coexistence or d6tente. One might admire, intermarrywith, trade
with, even borrow intellectual skills from, the infidel, but never concede the
legitimacy of his religion. To admit the legitimacy of the religion of the
enemy would have automaticallycalled into question the insistence upon the
exclusive religious superiorityof one's own. Since religion subsumedunderit
one's conception of the political and social order-of one's way of life-such
466 CHARLES J. HALPERIN