La transizione bizantino-ottomana nelle cronache veneziane
a cura di Sebastian Kolditz, Markus Koller
pp. 328, € 32,00 (Acquista online con il 15% di sconto)
Viella, 2018
ISBN: 9788867289172
Nel XIV e XV secolo, l’Impero Ottomano si andò affermando come nuova
potenza egemoniale nella regione che un tempo era stata il nucleo di
Bisanzio. Questa transizione interessò anche Venezia e l’élite veneziana
in quanto attori politici ed economici di rilievo nell’area. Di
conseguenza, i documenti veneziani sono stati spesso utilizzati per
illustrare la storia di un’epoca che vide il tramonto dell’Impero
bizantino e l’ascesa di quello ottomano. Eppure, le ripercussioni di
queste trasformazioni sulla copiosa produzione storiografica
tardo-medievale della Serenissima e, in particolare, sulle cronache
veneziane spesso anonime, non erano ancora state studiate in modo
sistematico.
In tale contesto questo volume, frutto di un workshop internazionale, combina riflessioni metodologiche sulle caratteristiche della cronachistica veneziana e dell’uso delle informazioni in essa contenute e singoli casi di studio che riflettono fasi cruciali della transizione bizantino-ottomana.
In tale contesto questo volume, frutto di un workshop internazionale, combina riflessioni metodologiche sulle caratteristiche della cronachistica veneziana e dell’uso delle informazioni in essa contenute e singoli casi di studio che riflettono fasi cruciali della transizione bizantino-ottomana.
Sebastian Kolditz is Academic Assistant at the Chair of Medieval
History, Historisches Seminar, at Heidelberg University. His research
concerns Byzantine History with a specific focus on Late Byzantium,
Conciliar History and Byzantine-Western relations as well as
Mediterranean and Maritime History of the Middle Ages. His publications
include the monograph Johannes VIII. Palaiologos und das Konzil von Ferrara-Florenz (1438-1439) (2013-2014), an article on Cultural Brokers in Relation with the Byzantine Court in the Later 14th and 15th Centuries (2013) and an article, written together with Nikolas Jaspert, on Christlich-muslimische Außenbeziehungen im Mittelmeerraum. Zur räumlichen und religiösen Dimension mittelalterlicher Diplomatie (2014).
Markus Koller studied Southeastern European History, History and Culture of the Near and Middle East, Turcology and Ancient History at the University of Munich. He defended a PhD at the Ruhr University in Bochum with a dissertation about violence in 18th-century Bosnia and finished his post-doctoral dissertation (Habilitation) on the late Ottoman rule in Hungary. His books and articles focus on the social history of the Ottoman Balkans as well as the cultural and political relationships between the early modern European states and the Ottoman Empire. Since 2011 he holds a professorship in History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum and since 2016 he is director of the Centre for Mediterranean Studies in Bochum. Koller conducted various research projects (mainly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) about Ottoman-Venetian diplomatic relations and military conflicts in the Mediterranean.
Markus Koller studied Southeastern European History, History and Culture of the Near and Middle East, Turcology and Ancient History at the University of Munich. He defended a PhD at the Ruhr University in Bochum with a dissertation about violence in 18th-century Bosnia and finished his post-doctoral dissertation (Habilitation) on the late Ottoman rule in Hungary. His books and articles focus on the social history of the Ottoman Balkans as well as the cultural and political relationships between the early modern European states and the Ottoman Empire. Since 2011 he holds a professorship in History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum and since 2016 he is director of the Centre for Mediterranean Studies in Bochum. Koller conducted various research projects (mainly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) about Ottoman-Venetian diplomatic relations and military conflicts in the Mediterranean.
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