Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

Front Cover
Judith Herrin, Guillaume Saint-Guillain
Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2011 - 347 pages
This volume explores a complex period in Byzantine history, the thirteenth century, from the Fourth Crusade to the recapture of Constantinople by exiled leaders from Nicaea. Here, specialist historians of the Byzantine successor states of the period, and of their key neighbours, examine the self-projection and interactions of these states, combining military history and diplomacy, commercial and theological contacts, and the experiences and self-description of individuals. This wide-ranging series of articles uses a great diversity of sources - Arabic, Armenian, Bulgarian, Greek, Latin, Persian and Serbian - to exploit the potential of the novel methodology employed and of prosopography as an additional historical tool of analysis.
 

Contents

Political Allegiance
9
The Aristocracy and the Empire of Nicaea
69
Prosopography of the Byzantine World 12041261 in
101
Serbias View of the Byzantine World 12041261
121
Identities
197
The Crusader States and Cyprus in a Thirteenthcentury
215
The Perspective of Genoa and Pisa
245
Venetian Historiography
265
Byzantines and Greeks
291
Thirteenthcentury Prosopography and Refugees
303
Concluding Remarks
309
Index
315
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About the author (2011)

Judith Herrin is Constantine Leventis Senior Research Fellow and Professor Emerita of Late Antique & Byzantine Studies, King's College London, UK.
Guillaume Saint-Guillain is Newton Fellow in the Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, King's College London, UK.

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