Chevron Left
Back to The Cosmopolitan Medieval Arabic World

Learner Reviews & Feedback for The Cosmopolitan Medieval Arabic World by Universiteit Leiden

4.8
stars
382 ratings

About the Course

Did you know that Arabic was for centuries the lingua franca in an area stretching from the south of Spain to the Chinese border? Did you know that the Middle East under Muslim rule in those days was the world’s beating heart of trade, but also of science and scholarship? Did you know that Islam in its formative period was heavily influenced by existing cultures in the region, like Indian, Greek, Persian and Byzantine culture? Did you know that for many centuries after the establishment of the Muslim Empire the majority of the population remained largely Christian and Jewish? Did you know that they held a protected status in Islamic law? Did you know that this generally open-minded, curious and open society stimulated many great innovations and inventions? Did you know that European scholarship in the Renaissance leaned heavily on the texts and inventions from the Middle East which were the outcome of this sophisticated advanced society? In this course we will focus on the fascinating history of the Arabic Medieval World. We will take you on a journey through the Middle Ages starting off in eighth-century Baghdad. Along the old pilgrim trails we will go to places like Mecca, Jerusalem and Najaf. We will show you the impressive markets of places like Cairo and Samarkand. However we will not hide the dark sides of society either, by introducing you to the flourishing widespread slave trade. We will visit the Abbasid court, the Harem of the caliph, and the palace of the Mamluk Sultan. We will show you some beautiful medieval manuscripts, that live on as the silent witnesses of the impressive achievements of scientists and medical doctors of this forgotten era. All along we will present you with historiographical debates and dilemma’s. Reflecting on the way we look at and interpret history. And while taking you on this journey, we will travel back and forth in time explaining to you how events of the past affected and shaped the world as we know it today. Welcome to the Cosmopolitan Medieval Arabic World! Enroll now and follow this course for free. --- Testimonial: Dear Prof. Sijpesteijn I am sending this email in gratitude for the Leiden University team for this course. Please thank the Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs for offering it on Coursera, the Faculty of Humanities for creating the lovely course content and the excellent reading material. Rarely have I seen an MOOC that is this well-researched and thought through. This is in addition to the excellent resources provided and the creative media. I finished the course and presently doing the honors-track. If I may introduce myself, I am Radi Radi, a Palestinian-Jordanian who lives on "Shajaret Al Dur" St. in Amman, Jordan. It was quite an coincidence to learn about her here. I work as a pilot and currently we are not flying anywhere currently so I thought of finishing this course. I am a Bachelor of Civil Engineering from Ryerson Univeristy, Canada and this really felt like the 100-level electives I took in that it really is a university-level course. I have bought a few books that I have read about in your course and that meant that I have something else to do in this corona-imposed hiatus. After Once aviation kicks back into gear, I hope to be flying to Amsterdam Again. When that happens, I plan on bringing you guys a gift from Amman for your efforts. Many Thanks Radi Radi...

Top reviews

KW

May 30, 2022

I learned so much in this course. I definitelyrecommend doing the extra readings and assignments in the honors track. The extra knowledge is worth the effort. I am delighted I found this course!

DG

Dec 10, 2019

Thank you for this beautiful course ! I learned a lot and most important, as a European, this course changed my vision of the Islamic world. This course opens my mind. Thank you !

Filter by:

101 - 123 of 123 Reviews for The Cosmopolitan Medieval Arabic World

By francisco v r

Sep 6, 2020

EXCELLENT COURSE

By Dave R

Apr 12, 2020

Excellent course

By Pedro R

Sep 15, 2022

Excellent!!!!!

By Joanne J

Mar 29, 2022

great course

By Mohd A

May 3, 2020

excellent!

By Mohamed H

Dec 26, 2018

i love you

By Ana M J L

Mar 6, 2022

excellent

By saf a

Apr 2, 2021

Thanks

By Veronica E p

May 18, 2020

I LIKE

By Joana M

May 3, 2020

In gereral, the course in The Cosmopolitan Medieval Arabic World is very interesting.

The different knowledge shared along the weeks is associated with sociey, its infrastructures, religion, commercial activities - trade, slaves and mameluks, cultural development, orientalism and translation movements.

In my opinion, from all the readins, only two of them were not that interesting and I feel that I lost too much time paying attention to it. The exams by the end of each module should be more straight to the information learnt.

Overall, the knowledge I got from it will be very important in my job.

By Nina F

Jan 14, 2021

This was a very enlightening and informative course. I learned about many things that I didn't know about before. I greatly enjoyed the lectures and the readings and am now very interested in learning more about the Medieval Arabic world. My only issue with this course is that the subtitles for the videos need to be improved. There is a lot of misspelling in the subtitles for the videos.

By Emily C

Mar 20, 2021

There is some engaging material in this course. In fact, I think I will probably access and refer to some of the materials again in the future. However, the best thing about the course was that I learnt that I could register for a JSTOR account and read a certain number of articles for free each month.

By Leonie K

Jan 1, 2023

A very interesting course which opened my eyes for the history of the medieval world.

Like with other Coursera courses, the transcripts were te weakest links in the course. Obviously there is no one that is proofreading them before they are published.

By Lowell N

Mar 8, 2021

Interesting subject, generally high-quality presentations, and well organized. Covered a broad range of issues (economic, social, governmental, scientific) to give a better feel for what was going on in this area at the time.

By Nick R

Feb 8, 2024

Overall, a very good introduction to the medieval Islamic world. Down points were that some of the reading was extremely heavy and the Soundcloud files often didn't work.

By Mehwish A

Apr 5, 2021

It was an amazing experience studying this course with Coursera, it has many fascinating stories which caught my attention and I would like to revisit them someday.

By Victoria E

Sep 17, 2022

A very good course that challenges a lot of stereotypes. A few of the links need replaceing as they have broken though.

By Kate C

Nov 30, 2022

Links to podcasts, part of the class offering, were broken.

By Andrew W

Feb 11, 2023

I was somewhat disappointed by the number of links to documents or Soundcloud items that didn't work - it seems to be difficult to get anyone to reply to my report of this. Something that obviously needs revision. At the time of writing I am still waiting feedback about one of my Honours assignments.

By Jules P

Oct 18, 2022

The podcasts were unaccessible, and the readings sometimes a little bit long, so the experience was not the best. It is though a good and interesting course !

By peter v b

Feb 23, 2023

quite a large number of podcasts and links do not work (anymore) The course should be updated

By Szepseskaf

Jun 28, 2021

The course wasn't bad. I've laerned some very interesting facts. However, the material I was supposed to read was rather boring. I'd rather listen to more lectures than read those many articles

By Deleted A

Dec 14, 2020

Always present facts. You had a lot of good information but enough misinformation that was important to understanding the region today that I could not watch. You lost more credibility when showing the travel slide with narration about a woman and her husband traveling to Hajj then said at the end this was an invention used to illustrate the scene/times. You should stick with the facts.