Juan Andrés (convert)


Juan Andrés, Latinized Joannes Andreas, is the name chosen by a Spanish Muslim scholar who converted to Catholicism and wrote a well known polemical work against Islam, the Confusión o confutación de la secta mahomética y del Alcorán.

Life

The man subsequently known as Juan Andrés was born in Xàtiva, Spain, the son of an Islamic scholar. Trained as a faqīh himself, he converted to Catholicism in 1487, in the days of the Inquisition, in Valencia Cathedral and took the Christian name Juan Andrés. Becoming a priest, he was made an envoy by the Catholic Monarchs Ferdinando and Isabela, to preach Christianity in Granada after it was reconquered. He worked closely with the Aragonese Inquisitor Martín García.
Around 1516 there was a canon of Granada Cathedral by the name Juan Andrés, but it is not certain that this is the same man.

Works

Juan Andrés' main apologetical work, Confusion de la secta mahomatica y del alcoran, while written to encourage Muslims to convert to Christianity, was later banned by the Spanish Inquisition due to the extensive quotations from the Qur'an that it contained. It nevertheless went into many further editions.
The Confusion de la secta mahomatica was translated into Italian as ', then from Italian into French as ' and into Latin as Confusio sectae Mahometanae. It was translated from Spanish into Dutch as ', and from Latin into German as '. An English translation bore the title The Confusion of Muhamed's Sect
A second book has also been attributed to him, Sumario breve de la pratica de la arithmetica, but with some doubt as to whether this is the same Juan Andrés.