The Muslim Archother and the Royal Other: Aristocratic Notions of Otherness in Fourteenth-Century Portugal
: Queimada E Silva Tiago
: Hans-Werner Goetz and Ian N. Wood
: Turnhout
: 2021
: Otherness in the Middle Ages
: International Medieval Research (IMR)
: 25
: 415
: 435
: 20
: 978-2-503-59402-6
: http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503594026-1
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/68355657
This article examines aristocratic notions of otherness in fourteenth-century Portugal. I build upon previous
research into Muslim ethno-religious otherness in medieval Iberia, framing it among other forms of otherness, such as political otherness. Instead of approaching otherness as a static phenomenon restricted to Muslim otherness, I explore this particular form of otherness among other forms of the phenomenon. I also consider different degrees of otherness, as well as how these disparate forms and degrees interrelate.3 My main argument is that otherness in the eyes of fourteenth-century Portuguese aristocracy was primarily defined by political enmity or rivalry. I stress that, despite being ethnoreligious in origin, Muslim otherness is so conspicuous in fourteenth-century aristocratic historiographical discourse because of Islam’s political status, and not simply due to religious antagonism.