In times of crises, be it about climate change, the pandemic corona virus, or democratic struggles, there is an unwaning interest worldwide in the end of times and related themes such as apocalypticism, messianism, and utopianism. This concerns scholarship and society alike, and is by no means limited to the religious field.
The present volume collates essays from specialists in the study of apocalyptic and eschatological subjects. With its interdisciplinary approach, it is designed to overcome the existing Euro-centrism and incorporate a broader perspective to the topic of end time expectations in the Christian Middle Ages as well as in East Asia and Africa.
Contributors include: Gaelle Bosseman, Wolfram Brandes, Matthias Gebauer, Jürgen Gebhardt, Vincent Goossaert, Klaus Herbers, Matthias Kaup, Bernardo Bertholin Kerr, Thomas Krümpel, Richard Landes, Zhao Lu, Rolf Scheuermann, and Julia Eva Wannenmacher.
Dr Hans-Christian Lehner (1982) is research fellow of Medieval History at the ICRH in Erlangen. His monograph Prophetie zwischen Eschatologie und Politik (2015) was focusing on prognostics as outlined in medieval historiography. He edited, translated, and annotated the 12th century Visio Tnugdali (with Maximilian Nix, 2018). With Matthias Heiduk and Klaus Herbers he edited the handbook Prognostication in the Middle Ages (2 vols. 2021).
"The volumeâs strength lies more in the excellent quality of most of its individual contributions, which are rather diverse in terms of (theoretical) approaches and disciplines involved." - Lukas K. Pokorny, Religious Studies Review, 22 (2022).
List of Figures and Tables
The End(s) of Time(s): An Introduction
âHans-Christian Lehner
Part 1
1 Christian Perspectives on History, Eschatology, and Transcendence in the Latin Christian Middle Ages
âKlaus Herbers
2 Byzantine Predictions of the End of the World in 500, 1000, and 1492 AD
âWolfram Brandes
3 The Great Peace and the Ends of Time in Early Imperial China
âZhao Lu
4 Tibetan Buddhist Dystopian Narratives and their Pedagogical Dimensions
âRolf Scheuermann
5 Ragnarök: Prophecies and Notions of the End Time in Old Norse Religion
âThomas Krümpel
6 An Overview of Baháâà Eschatology, in a Tapestry of Five Strands
âBernardo Bertholin Kerr
Part 2
7 Beatus of Liebana and the Spiritualized Understanding of Apocalypse in Medieval Iberia
âGaelle Bosseman
8 Muhammad, Mahdi, Antichrist: Muslims in Joachim of Fioreâs Apocalyptic Eschatology
âJulia Eva Wannenmacher
9 The Infernal Trinity as Passivized Pacemaker of Salvation History: Satanâs Particular Eschatological Activity in Anonymus Bambergensisâ Tracts De semine scripturarum and De principe mundi
âMatthias Kaup
Part 3
10 Competing Eschatological Scenarios during the Taiping War, 1851â1864
âVincent Goossaert
11 The Messianic Quest for an Earthly Paradise in the Modern Era of Revolution
âJürgen Gebhardt
12 Indigenous Millennialism: Murabitun Sufism in the Black African townships of South Africa
âMatthias Gebauer
13 Apocalyptic Millennialism: The Most Powerful, Volatile, Imaginary Force in Human History
âRichard Landes
Index
All interested in the history of the apocalypse and end time expectations in the Christian Middle Ages as well as in East Asia and Africa.