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A vivid, unsparing window onto faith, power and encounter at the turn of the twentieth century. It endures as urgent history. Originally printed as an islamic studies quarterly, The Moslem World (Volume XI) gathers contemporary reportage, reviews and reflective essays that map current events, literature and thought across Muslim lands. Coverage ranges from accounts of christian missions in islam to examinations of Muslim intellectual life, placing missionary practice beside local literary responses and public debate. Equal parts missionary history anthology and muslim world literature review, this early 20th century journal balances readable narrative with the documentary texture that both casual readers and classic-literature collectors prize.Historically and literarily significant, Volume XI offers an Edwardian vantage on interfaith relations history and the formation of modern religious discourse. Scholars of edwardian era religious studies and students of comparative theology will recognise in its pages a practical comparative theology resource: reportage, polemic and review that illuminate how ideas met on the ground. As a middle eastern history reference it supplies contemporaneous voices that remain essential for academic researchers of religion seeking primary context rather than retrospective summary. Its editorial stance and contributors capture the rhetoric, conviction and methodological limits of the age, making it invaluable as a snapshot of debates that continued to shape policy and scholarship.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. For bibliophiles assembling a world religions collection and for readers tracing Samuel Zwemer works or the wider history of missionary endeavour, Volume XI is both a readable archive and a culturally weighty document: precise in its observations, revealing in its contradictions, and indispensable for anyone interested in the encounters that shaped the modern Muslim world.