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Abstract
This article studies the subject of the conversion
of Muslims to Christianity in the High Middle
Ages (the 11th to the 13th centuries), in the light of the
historiography of the past twenty-five years. Much
importance is given to the notion of «discourse»,
carefully separating the ideology of conversion –ever
more central in this period of reinforcement of the
universal ideal of «Christendom»– and the reality
of economic and social relations in practice. Within
this scheme it seems exaggerated to oppose war and
conversion so radically. It is also suggested that the
conversion of Muslims cannot be studied without taking
into account the ideal of the conversion of the
Christian within the very same Church, an ideal that is
affirmed in the same era. Finally, neither can one forget
the importance in every type of conversion of the
paradigm of Eucharistic conversion, which is useful in
order to understand the conversion of objects as well
as that of persons. Medieval Christianity is a Christianity
of conversio