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Informationen zum Autor Stefan Esders is professor of late antique and early medieval history at the Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. He has published books and articles on the transformation of the late Roman world, on Mediterranean connectivity (sixth–ninth century), on Latin and the vernacular and on legal and social history in the early Middle Ages. He is involved in the critical edition of the Carolingian capitularies for the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (MGH). Yaniv Fox is a senior lecturer of late antique and early medieval history at Bar-Ilan University, Israel, and a member of the I-CORE Center for the Study of Conversion and Inter-Religious Encounters. He is the author of Power and Religion in Merovingian Gaul: Columbanian Monasticism and the Frankish Elites (Cambridge, 2014). Yitzhak Hen is Professor of late antique and early medieval history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the Director of the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies. He has published extensively on the religious, social, cultural and intellectual history of the post-Roman Barbarian kingdoms of the early medieval West. Laury Sarti is a lecturer of medieval history at the University of Freiburg (Germany). She is the author of 'Perceiving War and the Military in Early Christian Gaul (ca. 400–700 A.D.)' and numerous articles on the early medieval military and the interconnectivities between Byzantium and the West featured in the Journal of Medieval History, Early Medieval Europe, and Speculum. Klappentext This interdisciplinary volume re-evaluates the interconnectedness of the Merovingian world with its Mediterranean surroundings. Zusammenfassung Bringing together the scholarship of historians! archaeologists! art historians! and manuscript researchers! this volume analyses written accounts! archaeological findings and artefacts to provide new perspectives on the Merovingian world's connections with the Mediterranean! North Africa! and Spain. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of figures; List of contributors; Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; Introduction Stefan Esders and Yitzhak Hen; Part I. Expanding Political Horizons: 1. Archaeological perspectives on communication and exchange between the Merovingians and the Eastern Mediterranean Jörg Drauschke; 2. Anxiously looking east: Burgundian foreign policy on the eve of the Reconquest Yaniv Fox; 3. Pax inter utramque gentem: the Merovingians, Byzantium and the history of Frankish identity Helmut Reimitz; Part II. Patterns of Intensification - the 580s: 4. Cultural transmission caught in the act: Gregory of Tours and the relics of St Sergius Phillip Wynn; 5. Hermenegild's rebellion and conversion - Merovingian and Byzantine connections Wolfram Drews; 6. Early Byzantine church silver offered for the eternal rest of Framarich and Karilos: evidence of 'the army of heroic men' raised by Tiberius II Constantine? Benjamin Fourlas; 7. Money for nothing? Franks, Byzantines and Lombards in the sixth and seventh century Andreas Fischer; Part III. The Pope as a Mediterranean Player: 8. The Papacy and the Frankish Bishops in the sixth century Sebastian Scholz; 9. A one-way ticket to Francia: Constantinople, Rome and northern Gaul in the mid-seventh century Charles Mériaux; 10. The digression on Pope Martin I in the Life of Eligius of Noyon. A testimony to late seventh-century knowledge exchange between East and West? Laury Sarti; 11. Perceptions of Rome and the papacy in late Merovingian Francia: the Cononian recension of the Liber pontificalis Rosamond McKitterick; Part IV. Religious and Cultural Exchange: 12. Relocation to the West: the relic of the True Cross in Poitiers Galit Noga-Banai; 13. A generic Mediterranean: hagiography in the early Middle Ages Jamie Kreiner; 14. Defensor of Ligugé's Liber scintillarum and the migration of knowledge Yitzhak Hen; 15. Willibald in the holy places Ora Limor; Part V. Rethinking the Late Merovingians: 16. 'Great secu...