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      Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204
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      Book

      Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

      DOI link for Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

      Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 book

      Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

      DOI link for Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

      Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 book

      ByBenjamin Arbel, Bernard Hamilton, David Jacoby
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1989
      eBook Published 1 August 1989
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203061695
      Pages 256
      eBook ISBN 9780203061695
      Subjects Humanities
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      Arbel, B., Hamilton, B., & Jacoby, D. (1989). Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203061695

      ABSTRACT

      First published in 1989. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |44 pages

      From Byzantium to Latin Romania: Continuity and Change

      DAVID JACOBY

      part |2 pages

      The Establishment

      chapter |6 pages

      He soon learned, however -to his great surprise and indignation -that, in addition to the excesses committed during and since the taking of the city (which he considered as having caused the Greeks to distance themselves from the Latins), the crusaders had permitted themselves to take over Church property, to institute an ecclesiastical hierarchy, and to assign its titles to themselves. Annulling the conventions concluded between the crusaders and the Venetians, he deposed the legate Peter of Capua, who had ratified the fait accompli. None the less, not being able to cause a total break with the new emperor, he was forced to accept the establishment of this Church, which had been made without his approval.

      chapter |10 pages

      remained without effect.On the other hand, the Hospitallers

      chapter |11 pages

      Greeks and Latins after 1204: The Perspective

      MICHAEL ANGOLD

      chapter |13 pages

      of the Latins,

      chapter |24 pages

      Between Romaniae: Thessaly and Epirus in the Later Middle Ages

      PAUL MAGDALINO

      chapter |13 pages

      Western Attitudes to Frankish Greece in the Thirteenth Century

      chapter |5 pages

      to the queen who saw him very readily; and he told her his problems. And the queen said that she would gladly give it some thought; and kept him with her for a long time, and she found that he spoke in a childish fashion; and he displeased her greatly, for to retain an empire requires a man who is wise and vigorous.

      chapter |11 pages

      The Medieval Towers o/Greece: A Problem in Chronology and Function

      PETER LOCK

      chapter |6 pages

      Venetian control of its Aegean sea-lanes gives weight to this assump-tion, does a cursory examination of some of the tower sites. In

      chapter |12 pages

      The Latins and Life on the Smaller Aegean Islands, 1204-1453

      ANTHONY T. LUTTRELL

      chapter |12 pages

      The Genoese in the Aegean (1204-1566)

      MICHEL BALARD

      chapter |5 pages

      certain Greeks were given administrative responsibilities. In 1394, Costa Meistro Mismilangi (a banker) and Michali Meistro Spano, along with two Latins and a Jew, became officiales provisionis grani of Chios; they borrowed the funds necessary to assure the provisioning of the island. Ten years later, they were replaced by Sergi Avafisto and Criti Sepsi; the latter, also a banker, was re-appointed in 1408, this time along with George Agelastro. These ·offices were far from honorary,

      chapter |5 pages

      The Cypriot Nobility from the Fourteenth to the Sixteenth Century: A New Interpretation

      BENJAMIN ARBEL
      Byof Cyprus, there has been

      chapter |5 pages

      be regarded as a list of families represented in the urban council of Nicosia. This list is preceded by the misleading title, 'The noble lineages or families of Cyprus' (Les races ou maisons nobles de Cypre), and is followed by the phrase 'here, then, are all the noble families, old and new, who entered during our times the great council, except two, the names of which I cannot remember.,28 However, contrary to Lusignan's assertions, there was never any promise to confer nobility on settlers in the Venetian colony, and membership of this urban council did not entail the acquisition of this status. The Italian version of Lusignan's book, the Chorografia (published in though not containing the misleading title at the head of the

      part |1 pages

      the second has names. As both chronicles refer to 'knights' (kaval-

      chapter |12 pages

      Famagusta's market; Andrea Sanson, pilot (nochiere) of 'the great ship'; Francesco Jafuni, a druggist; Marco Carioti,

      chapter |14 pages

      The Mongols and the Eastern Mediterranean

      DAVID O. MORGAN

      chapter |14 pages

      Holy War in the Aegean during the Fourteenth Century

      ELIZABETH ZACHARIADOU

      chapter |14 pages

      The Image

      ROBERT IRWIN
      ByFrank in Arab Popular Literature the Late Middle Ages

      chapter |3 pages

      Mamluk embassy to England in the 1270s or at any other time. There was a Mamluk emir called Sarim al-DIn al-Mas'tidI, but he had died in a fracas in the Hall of Justice some years earlier. What should we

      chapter |3 pages

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