Muslims, Christians, and Jews in the crusader kingdom of Valencia : societies in symbiosis
著者
書誌事項
Muslims, Christians, and Jews in the crusader kingdom of Valencia : societies in symbiosis
(Cambridge Iberian and Latin American studies)
Cambridge University Press, 1984
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注記
Bibliography: p. 331-345
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The crusade which conquered Mediterranean Spain in the thirteenth century resulted in the domination by an alien Christian minority of a dissident Muslim majority and an unusually large Jewish population. Professor Burns' research into previously untapped archival sources reveals the tensions and interaction between the three religious societies after the crusade. A principal source for the author's research has been the revolutionary paper registers of King Jaume the Conqueror. These abundant and neglected documents shed new light on Jaume's pluri-ethnic kingdom during its first generation of settlement. The chapters, each a pioneering work for its topic, are radically different in subject and in approach, and yet concern the same theme, the symbiosis of cultures in the redeveloping kingdom, and the same time-span, the reigns of Jaume the Conqueror and his son, Pere the Great.
目次
- 1. Muslim-Christian conflict and contact: Mudejar methodology
- 2. Surrender constitutions: the Islamic communities of Eslida and Alfandech
- 3. Christian-Muslim confrontation: the thirteenth-century Cream of conversion
- 4. Piracy: Islamic-Christian interface in conquered Valencia
- 5. King Jaume's Jews: problem and methodology
- 6. Portrait gallery: Jews of crusader Valencia
- 7. The language barrier: bilingualism and interchange
- 8. Bounding the Moorish frontier: territoriality and prosopography
- 9. Real estate and literary echo: the case of Jofre de Loaysa
- 10. Voices of silence: al-Azraq and the French connection: why the Valencian crusade never ended.
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