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People of the most diverse origins, functions and religious affiliations gathered at Christian and Muslim courts in the Medieval Mediterranean: Diplomats, scholars, artists, merchants and pilgrims came as visitors and encountered a wide spectrum of court officials such as administrative personnel, translators, religious experts, the ruler's confidants, not to forget the Royal family itself. A wide range of religious backgrounds can be discerned, and arguably communication took place between these agents at court, who therefore transcended cultural borders. The articles in this volume focus these "cultural brokers" and their importance for processes of mediaeval entanglement. In a sweeping survey covering the entire Mediterranean and its hinterland, the thirteen papers deal with the courts of the Abbassids, the Ilkhans, the Fatimids and the Byzantines as well as with the courts of Rhodes, Cyprus, Aragon, Castile, Granada, Venice and Rome. Different forms and agents of brokerage are analysed, particular attention being paid to modes and means of inter-religious contact. By taking both the northern and southern rim of the Mediterranean into account, this volume extends our view of mediaeval court cultures and opens the field for transcultural comparisons.
About the author
Nikolas Jaspert, geb. 1962, studierte Geschichte, Kunstgeschichte, Hispanistik und Anglistik in Berlin und Madrid. Seit 2005 ist er Professor für die Geschichte des Mittelalters unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Späten Mittelalters an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum. Seine Interessens- und Forschungsschwerpunkte liegen im Bereich der mediterranen, insbesondere iberischen Geschichte des Mittelalters, der Kreuzzüge, der Ordensgeschichte, der Ritterorden und der deutsch-spanischen Beziehungen.