ABSTRACT

Unlike many narratives about the Czech lands, which place them on the periphery of their own history, this study considers Czechs as central characters, looking both east and west to find their place in the early modern world. Islam, Christianity and the Making of Czech Identity, 1453-1683 works through the descriptive and ethnographic texts produced by Czech speakers about Islam and the Ottoman Empire to show how they used this discourse to create Czech identities. Rather than simply constructing identity in opposition to the Islamic Other, Laura Lisy-Wagner shows how these authors played the Holy Roman and Ottoman Empires off each other, creating an autonomous space for themselves in between. Lisy-Wagner introduces sources that are new to English-language historiography and uses them in a way that is new to Czech historiography as well. The chapters are organized based on different categories of agents-travelers, ethnographers, religious leaders, artists, and political revolutionaries-whose voices cast ideas of Europe and Czech identity in the early modern period in a new and different light.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

The Deserts of Bohemia

chapter 1|31 pages

From Bohemia to the End of the World

chapter 2|30 pages

Turning Turk

chapter 3|20 pages

You Who Are God's Warriors

chapter 4|17 pages

That Incomparable Moravian

chapter 5|20 pages

Four Flowers and Two-Tailed Lions

chapter 6|28 pages

Between the Eagle and the Crescent

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

Exit, Pursued by a Bear