Fr. 180.00

BYZANTINES LATINS AND TURKS IN - After 115

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext Every scholar or research library with interests of the late medieval eastern Mediterranean should have a copy. Informationen zum Autor Jonathan Harris is Reader in Byzantine History at the Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of LondonCatherine Holmes is Fellow and Praelector in Medieval History at University College, OxfordEugenia Russell is Visiting Lecturer at Royal Holloway, University of London Klappentext Byzantines, Latins, and Turks in the Eastern Mediterranean World after 1150 is a collection of thirteen original articles which focus on the religious identity, cultural exchange, commercial networks, and the construction of political legitimacy among Christians and Muslims in the late Medieval eastern Mediterranean. Zusammenfassung The late medieval eastern Mediterranean, before its incorporation into the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth century, presents a complex and fragmented picture. The Ayyubid and Mamluk sultanates held sway over Egypt and Syria, Asia Minor was divided between a number of Turkish emirates, the Aegean between a host of small Latin states, and the Byzantine Empire was only a fragment of its former size. This collection of thirteen original articles, by both established and younger scholars, seeks to find common themes that unite this disparate world. Focusing on religious identity, cultural exchange, commercial networks, and the construction of political legitimacy among Christians and Muslims in the late Medieval eastern Mediterranean, they discuss and analyse the interaction between these religious cultures and trace processes of change and development within the individual societies. A detailed introduction provides a broad geopolitical context to the contributions and discusses at length the broad themes which unite the articles and which transcend traditional interpretations of the eastern Mediterranean in the later medieval period. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ; LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS ; NOTE ABOUT TRANSLITERATION ; ABBREVIATIONS ; LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS ; INTRODUCTION ; 1. 'Shared Worlds': Religious Identities - A Question of Evidence ; 2. Imperial Constantinople: Relics, Palaiologan Emperors and the Resilience of the Exemplary Centre ; 3. The Eastern Mediterranean in the Later Middle Ages - An Island World? ; 4. Constantinople as City State, c. 1360-1453 ; 5. Transposed Images: Currencies and Legitimacy in the Late Medieval Eastern Mediterranean ; 6. Conquest Legitimised: The Making of a Byzantine Emperor in Crusader Constantinople (1204-1261) ; 7. Conquest and Political Legitimation in the Early Ottoman Empire ; 8. Byzantine Authority and Latin Rule in the Gattilusio Lordships ; 9. 'New Wine in Old Skins': Crusading Literature and Crusading in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Later Middle Ages ; 10. Aragon versus Turkey - Tirant lo Blanc and the Conquerer: Iberia, the Crusade and Late Medieval Chivalry ; 11. Palestine in Late Medieval Islamic Spirituality and Culture ; 12. Turks, Mamluks and Latin Merchants: Commerce, Conflictand Co-operation in the Eastern Mediterranean ; 13. Byzantium and the West in the 1360s: the Kydones Version ; INDEX ...

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