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Greek Captives and Mediterranean Slavery, 1260–1460 (Edinburgh Byzantine Studies)

✍ Scribed by Alasdair C Grant


Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Year
2024
Tongue
English
Leaves
257
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Captivity and enslavement were characteristic experiences of Greek Christians in the late medieval Mediterranean. During this time, Muslim Turks and Christian western Europeans conquered and traded at the expense of the shrinking Byzantine Empire. By bringing together literary and documentary sources spanning a geographical canvas from the Aegean to Egypt and from Cyprus to Catalonia, this book tells that story in full for the first time. It traces this crisis of captivity from its origins in thirteenth-century Asia Minor to its explosion into a Mediterranean-wide phenomenon, interrogating different types of unfreedom and forced movement and evaluating their significance for Greeks’ religious and diplomatic relationships with their neighbours, both Christian and Muslim.

This book tells the story of thousands of ordinary people caught up in conflict and dispersed across the Mediterranean against their will. It is the first study to examine the social, cultural and political ramifications of this late medieval trade in Greeks. The book’s wide geographical horizons and its accessible style ensure that it will appeal to anyone interested in the medieval Mediterranean or the history of slavery. Its use of previously unpublished or little-known textual sources and its extensive synthesis of Byzantine, Latin European and Islamic sources and scholarship ensure that it will offer new perspectives and revelations for the specialist.

✦ Table of Contents


Maps
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction: A Crisis of Captivity
Previous Scholarship
Aims, Evidence and Approaches
Ethnic Categories
Religious Categories
Categories of Unfreedom
Chapter Outline
Part I: Historical Contexts
Chapter 1: Political Changes in Asia Minor
The Late Medieval RomanΓ­a
The Collapse of Byzantine Asia Minor
Evidence of Crisis (1): Cyprus
Evidence of Crisis (2): Crete
Catalans in the RomanΓ­a
Conclusions
Chapter 2: Slave Trading in the Mediterranean and Black Sea
The Slave Trade
Greek Captives in Context
Genoa and the Trade in Greek Captives
Byzantine Relations with the MamlΕ«k Sultanate
Greek Captives, Cyprus and the MamlΕ«k Sultanate
Conclusion
Part II: Social Dynamics
Chapter 3: Captives, Slaves and Refugees
Captives or Slaves?
Experiences of Captivity
Experiences of Slavery
Captives or Refugees?
Trends in Forced Mobility
Conclusions
Chapter 4: Methods of Redemption
Ransom as Religious Duty
Captives’ Letters of Clerical Advocacy (Aichmalotika)
The Distribution of Testimonials
Further Evidence for Itinerant Alms-Seeking
The Individual as Ransomer
Prisoner Exchanges
Military Orders
Conclusion
Part III: Cross-Cultural Relations
Chapter 5: Christian Masters, Christian Slaves?
Religion and Slavery
Ethnicity and Slavery
Subjecthood and Captivity
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Turkish Conquests, Conquered Greeks
Greek Clergy and Captives under Islamic Rule
Greek Captives and Slaves in Islamic Asia Minor
Raiding and Depopulation
Conquest and Deportation
Conclusions
Conclusion: A Mediterranean Phenomenon
Bibliography
Index


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