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The Sea in the Middle: The Mediterranean World, 650–1650

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The Sea in the Middle presents an original and revisionist narrative of the development of the medieval west from late antiquity to the dawn of modernity. This textbook is uniquely centered on the Mediterranean and emphasizes the role played by peoples and cultures of Africa, Asia, and Europe in an age when Christians, Muslims, and Jews of various denominations engaged with each other in both conflict and collaboration.

Key features:

  • Fifteen-chapter structure to aid classroom use  
  • Sections in each chapter that feature key artifacts relevant to chapter themes
  • Dynamic visuals, including 190 photos and 20 maps

The Sea in the Middle and its sourcebook companion, Texts from the Middle, pair together to provide a framework and materials that guide students through this complex but essential history—one that will appeal to the diverse student bodies of today.

Authors: Burman Thomas, Catlos Brian, Meyerson Mark
Publisher: UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Pages: 496
ISBN: 9780520296527
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
A Note on Conventions

Introduction. The Mediterranean: Land, Sea, and People

PART I. THE HELLENO-ISLAMIC MEDITERRANEAN (650–1050 CE):
THE MAKING OF THE HELLENO-ISLAMIC MEDITERRANEAN 

1 The Legacy of Empire
 The Age of Empires 
 ARTIFACT: Negotiating Conquest: The Pact of ꞌUmar and the Treaty of Tudmir 
 Faith and Power
 ARTIFACT: Images of Empire: Basil II, Otto III, and ꞌAbd al-Malik

2 Mediterranean Connections
 Conflict and Integration
 ARTIFACT: al-Qahira (Cairo): The Evolution of an Imperial Capital
 Connection and Exchange 
 ARTIFACT: The Ribat-Funduq of Sousse (Susa): Military, Commercial, and Religious
 Infrastructure in the Islamic Mediterranean

3 Conversion and the Consolidation of Identities
 Muslim Conquest and Christian Conversion
 ARTIFACT: The Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem

Byzantine Christianity and the Eastern Churches
 The Imperial Church under Siege 
 ARTIFACT: The Church of Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom) in Constantinople 
 The Latin Church in the West 
 An Islamo-Judaic Mediterranean 

4 Peoples of the Book Reading Their Books
 ARTIFACT: Wearing God’s Book in Medieval Egypt
 God’s Books 
 Holy Books and Scholars
 Holy Books and Greco-Roman Thinking
 ARTIFACT: Medieval Readers: Greco-Roman Texts
 Interpretation, Unity, and Power
 ARTIFACT: Jewish Responsa and Muslim Fatwas 

PART II. AN AGE OF CONFLICT AND COLLABORATION (1050–1350 CE):
THE MEDITERRANEAN FROM THE EDGES

5 Holy and Unholy War 
 Pilgrims and Predators, ca. 1050–1150 
 ARTIFACT: Holy War
 The Contested Mediterranean, ca. 1150–1250 
 ARTIFACT: Venice’s St. Mark’s Square and the Plundering of the Past

6 A Connected Sea 
 Conflict and Integration, ca. 1250–1350
 ARTIFACT: Whose Art? Transregional Sensibilities and Itinerant Objects
 Mediterranean Connections, ca. 1050–1350
 ARTIFACT: To the Sea in Ships

Strategies and Structures, ca. 1050–1350
 ARTIFACT: Mapping the Mediterranean and the World

7 Mediterranean Societies 
 The Politics of Diversity
 ARTIFACT: The Many Faces of Roger II
 Complex Societies 
 ARTIFACT: The Mosque and Hospital at Divriği 
 Cosmopolitan Communities 
 ARTIFACT: The Architecture of Power in the Iberian Peninsula

8 Reading Each Others’ Books 
 Translators and Terrific Stories 
 ARTIFACT: Alexander the Great in Latin, Hebrew, and Arabic
 Their Scripture, Our Language
 Talking Religion
 ARTIFACT: Interreligious Conversations, Real and Imagined

9 A Sea of Technology, Science, and Philosophy 
 Technology
 ARTIFACT: Qanat and Noria
 Science 
 ARTIFACT: The Seven Heavens
 Aristotle: The Master of All Who Know 

PART III. THE CONTEST FOR THE MEDITERRENEAN (1350–1650 CE):
NEW EMPIRES, NEW SECTS, NEW WORLDS

10 Imperial Rivalry and Sectarian Strife
  The Rise of Frontier Empires, ca. 1350–1500
  ARTIFACT: Papal Propaganda in Renaissance Rome
  The Duel of Empires and the Web of Alliances, ca. 1500–1650
  ARTIFACT: Dueling Caesars: Representations of Ottoman and Habsburg Imperial Power

11 Minorities and Diasporas
  Toward Religious Uniformity in the Catholic Mediterranean
  ARTIFACT: The Lead Books of Granada
  Religious Pluralism in the Muslim Mediterranean
  ARTIFACT: Orthodox Monasteries and the Ottoman Empire
  Diasporas
  ARTIFACT: The Jewish Ghetto in Venice 326

12 Slavery and Captivity, 650–1650
  Medieval Transformations of an Ancient Institution
  Life of the Enslaved
  ARTIFACT: The Ottoman Harem
  Captives and Ransoming 
  ARTIFACT: Malta Transformed: The Impact of the Order of the Knights of St. John
  Slavery and Racism
  ARTIFACT: Black Africans in the Art of Western Mediterranean Christians

13 Mystical Messiahs and Converts, Humanists and Armorers
  Mediterranean Mystics
  ARTIFACT: El Greco: Painting the Mystical across the Mediterranean
  Mediterranean Messiahs
  ARTIFACT: Mediterranean Predictions of the End, 1450–1650 
  Converts
  Humanists and Philosophers, Scientists and Engineers
  ARTIFACT: Optics and Eyeglasses

14 Family, Gender, and Honor, ca. 650–1650
  Honorable Families
  ARTIFACT: Marriage Issues in the Jewish Diaspora: The Case of the Ottoman Near East
  Women Inside, Women Outside
  ARTIFACT: Women and Inquisitors in the Early Modern Mediterranean
  Men and Violence

15 Mediterranean Economies and Societies in a Widening World
  Economy and Society after the Black Death
  ARTIFACT: The Venetian Arsenal and Venetian Galleys
  Economic and Social Problems in an Age of Empire
  The Mediterranean and the Atlantic
  ARTIFACT: Profit, Fear, and Fascination: Elizabethan England and the Muslim World

Epilogue: Luís de Torres in Cuba, Ishmael in the South Pacific: A World Grown
Larger, a Sea Grown Smaller?

Index

Thomas E. Burman is Professor of History at University of Notre Dame. He is a scholar of Christian-Muslim-Jewish intellectual and cultural history in the medieval Mediterranean. His book Reading the Qur’an in Latin Christendom was awarded the Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History.  

Brian A. Catlos is Professor of Religious Studies at University of Colorado Boulder. He works on Christian-Muslim-Jewish relations in the premodern Mediterranean. His most recent book, Kingdoms of Faith: A New History of Islamic Spain, is available in eight languages and as an audiobook.

Mark D. Meyerson is Professor in the Department of History and Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. He works on Christian-Muslim-Jewish relations in the premodern Mediterranean and on the history of violence. His book A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain was runner-up for the National Jewish Book Award, USA.

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