Öz
The most basic way to understand a religion is through examining the texts which are considered sacred. This approach adopted by the history of Religions as an epistemological necessity is also one of the demands of modern science. It was possible to reach this seemingly basic understanding only at the end of a long process. One of the most important factors behind this change is the mentality transformation that emerged as a result of bloody struggles in Europe. Until the Renaissance and Enlightenment, Europeans did not see other religions and Islam as a religion because they saw Christianity as the only and true religion. Since Islam was seen as a heretical Christian sect or its holy book the Qur’an as "delusions" invented by a "false Prophet", this faith deserved not to be understood, but to be eradicated and destroyed. For this struggle, it was not necessary to understand, but only to know this religion in detail in order to direct sound arguments against the enemy. Peter the Venerable who commissioned Robert of Ketton to translate the Qur’an into Latin or Theodor Bibliander who printed this version were all churchmen believing in the truth of Christianity alone. The Qur’an represented for them the senseless words of false and heretic prophet.
In Europe the Qur'an was first translated into Latin in the middle of the twelfth century. Four centuries later, this translation was put into print. The Latin translation, which Theodor Bibliander revised and printed after many hesitations and objections from churchmen and local administrators, constituted the source of the translations of the Qur’an in Italian, German and Dutch. The Latin translation of the Qur’an commissioned by Peter the Venerable to Robert of Ketton, the printing of this translation by the Protestant scholar Theodor Bibliander in 1543, or the later Latin translation of the Alcorani Textus Universus by cardinal Ludovico Marraccio in 1698, although considered much better than others, shared the main purpose: to be used as a tool in the fight against Islam. Nothing could be expected from the aforementioned figures, who were Christian clergymen, other than to behave in a polemic fashion against Islam. What was at stake in these translations was to learn about Islam from its main source in order to "shoot it with its own weapons" or to use it as a tool for missionary activities.
In 1647, the Qur’an was translated into a local European language for the first time. This translation of the Qur’an by André Du Ryer from the original into French was named L'Alcoran de Mahomet. Later, this work was translated into English, German, Dutch, Spanish, Italian and Russian, allowing the spread of the Qur’an in many European local languages, and made it possible for large masses of people who did not speak Latin to read the Qur’an and understand it without ideological distortions. By focusing on the biography and bibliography of Du Ryer, this study, tried to determine what motivates him to translate the Qur’an.
The translation of the Qur'an by André Du Ryer can be considered as a turning point for Europeans to view other religions and especially Islam. First of all, Du Ryer was not a clergyman but a diplomat and an intellectual character interested in eastern languages and literatures. He lived in Egypt and Istanbul for long years and learned Arabic and Turkish at a good level in these places, gained an anthropological perspective by observing directly, unlike those who wrote about Islam without ever seeing any Muslims in any Islamic country. It must be noted that scientists such as Alastair Hamilton and Francis Richard, who conducted the most elaborate study on Du Ryer, misapplied some of the information he conveyed about the religious understanding and religious life of the Turks because they overlooked this point.