Transmediterranean History: Difference between revisions

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==New Neighbours (''c.'' 9th-11th cent.)==
==New Neighbours (''c.'' 9th-11th cent.)==
[[973: Ibn Ḥawqal on Christian-Muslim Marriages in Sicily]]
[[973: Ibn Ḥawqal on Christian-Muslim Marriages in Sicily]]
<br>[[984: Some Letters by Gerbert d’Aurillac Dealing with “Arabic” Mathematics and Astrology]]
==Latin-Christian Expansion (''c.'' 11th-13th cent.)==
==Latin-Christian Expansion (''c.'' 11th-13th cent.)==
==Negotiating Religious Boundaries (''c.'' 13th-17th cent.)==
==Negotiating Religious Boundaries (''c.'' 13th-17th cent.)==

Revision as of 17:00, 7 July 2020

“Transmediterranean History” is a commented anthology of primary sources that aims at facilitating access to transmediterranean themes and their documentation for researchers, teachers and amateurs. The database uses Media-Wiki software to provide access to epochally grouped and chronologically ordered excerpts of primary sources in their original language and in translation. These excerpts are equipped with a commentary, which furnishes details on the author and his/her work as well as the contents and context of the respective passage, and then analyses and interprets the excerpts within a wider thematical framework. A list of the excerpt’s available editions and translations, a bibliography containing the cited literature and recommended readings as well as a list of keywords complement the commentary. “Transmediterranean History” is searchable and will hopefull soon offer the possibilty of creating a reader catering to the users’ individual needs with the help of the Book Creator.

Before the Arabic-Islamic Expansion (until c. 636)

621: Isidore of Seville on the Origins of the Term “Saracens”

Arabic-Islamic Expansion (c. 7th-9th cent.)

New Neighbours (c. 9th-11th cent.)

973: Ibn Ḥawqal on Christian-Muslim Marriages in Sicily
984: Some Letters by Gerbert d’Aurillac Dealing with “Arabic” Mathematics and Astrology

Latin-Christian Expansion (c. 11th-13th cent.)

Negotiating Religious Boundaries (c. 13th-17th cent.)