Mihai-Cristian Amăriuţei, Lidia Cotovanu, Ovidiu-Victor

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mihai-Cristian Amăriuţei, Lidia Cotovanu, Ovidiu-Victor MIHAI-CRISTIAN AMĂRIUŢEI, LIDIA COTOVANU, OVIDIU-VICTOR OLAR, Phanariot Donations to the Mega Spileon Monastery (18th Century) Abstract: The monastery of Great Cave (Mega Spileon) from Moreea has occupied a special place in the consciousness of the Eastern Christianity subjected to the Ottoman sultan, being at a certain moment named the New Jerusalem. According to tradition, this monastery keeps a miracle-working icon of the Holy Virgin painted by the holy Apostle and Evangelist Luke. This monastery received donations from ‘Phanariote’ princes of Moldova and Wallachia. The chronology of these donations seems to connect their beginning to the restoration of Ottoman rule in Pelopones and the return of the monastery (with other monasteries from the region) under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchy of Constantinople in 1715-16. Although it is possible that occasional aids were sent to this monastery in early sixteenth century, the lack of consistent Romanian donations to Pelopones in general and especially to Mega Spileon may be explain by the lack of migration from that region to northern Danube. The first donations of Moldavian and Wallachia princes to the Great Cave “imperial and patriarchal” monastery belong to those from Ghica family, while they were ruling in Wallachia in eighteenth century. These initiatives originated essentially in the attribute of Byzantine inspiration, which gave the prince the role of patron of the Orthodox Church supplemented by motivations concerned with devotional traditions of the economy of salvation, the expressing of filial piety of donors, social assistance practices and administration of properties acquired by emigrants in their destination countries. There is a long series of donations made by various Ghica princes – Gregory Ghica, 1733-35, 1748-52, Matei Ghica, 1752-53, Scarlat Ghica, probably in both his reigns in Bucharest and for sure on 5 February 1759, Alexandru Scarlat Ghica on 20 February 1768, Grigore III Ghica on 6 February 1769. To these one may add the donation of the chapel dedicated to the ‘Dormition of the Mother of God’ of Vlah Serai princely palace from Constantinople (The Empress of Fortresses). A possible interpretation may be an attempt of this family carrying out an ambitious dynastic project, reflected symbolically on diverse levels. The reason of writing this paper is the discovery in the archive of the Institute of History of the Academy of Sciences from Sankt Petersburg of an unknown document issued by Grigore Alexandru Ghica. The documented issued on 6 February 1769 is edited together with two other contemporary documents in the annexes of the paper. Keywords: Mega Spileon, New Jerusalem, donations, Ghica princes, Moldavia, Wallachia. List of illustrations: Fig. 1. Morea olim Peloponnesus. Bernard Randolph, The present state of the Morea [...], 1689 (3rd edition). Fig. 2. Morea olim Peloponnesus (Detail of Madona di Spiglia). Bernard Randolph, The present state of the Morea [...], 1689 (3rd edition). Fig. 3. The Monastery of Mega Spileon. KtitorikÝn [...], 1840. Fig. 4. Coat of arms of Moldavia and Wallachia. <H je»a ka· ¸er ‚kolouj»a [...], Leipzig, 1775, p. 54 [148]. Fig. 5. The Mother of God Spileotissa. SÊnaxic, 1706. Fig. 6. Icon “from the holy patriarchal and imperial monastery of the Great Cave,” 1630s. 18th Century silver cover. MNAR, inventory no. i 1350/16063. Fig. 7. Icon “from the holy patriarchal and imperial monastery of the Great Cave,” 1630s. The wooden panel. MNAR, inventory no. i 1350/16063. Fig. 8. February 6th, 1769. Archive of the St. Petersburg Branch of the Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences – ЗЕС 51/1, no. 200. Mihai-Cristian AMĂRIUŢEI is an independent researcher from Iaşi; e-mail: [email protected] Lidia COTOVANU, PhD, is an Postdoctoral Researcher at École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris; e-mail: [email protected] Ovidiu-Victor OLAR, PhD Candidate, is an Researcher at “N. Iorga” Institute of History, Bucharest; e-mail: [email protected] .
Recommended publications
  • Revista Istorică
    REVISTA ISTORICĂ SERIE NOUĂ TOMUL XIX, NR. 1–2 ianuarie–aprilie 2008 S U M A R IN HONOREM ŞERBAN PAPACOSTEA STATALITATE ŞI INSTITUŢII – ÎNTEMEIEREA ŢĂRILOR ROMÂNE ANDREI PIPPIDI, La originile Ţării Româneşti ...................................................................... 5 ŞTEFAN ANDREESCU, Exarhatul. Geneza instituţiei în Ţara Românească şi Moldova ........ 21 LIVIU PILAT, Sfântul Scaun şi întemeierea Moldovei ............................................................. 29 MATEI CAZACU, O controversă: Thocomerius – Negru Vodă ............................................... 49 SERGIU IOSIPESCU, Bătălia de la Posada (9–12 noiembrie 1330). O contribuţie la critica izvoarelor istoriei de început a principatului Ţării Româneşti ........................................ 59 CULT ŞI ETNIE NAGY PIENARU, Otomanii şi Habsburgii. Diplomaţie şi confesiune. Două documente otomane din 1616 ........................................................................................................... 83 ALEXANDRU CIOCÎLTAN, Contrareforma la Câmpulung. Noi documente (1635–1646)..... 99 CULTURĂ ŞI POLITICĂ ILEANA CĂZAN, Cronica Ghiculeştilor. Discurs istoriografic şi realităţi politice internaţionale (1699–1739) .................................................................................................................... 119 NICOLAE LIU, Orizont european în Iluminismul românesc. Francofonie şi cultură franceză.. 135 AMINTIRI ŞI CORESPONDENŢĂ GEORGETA FILITTI, Scrisori de altădată. Din trecutul familiei Aricescu .............................
    [Show full text]
  • Greek As Ottoman? Language, Identity and Mediation of Ottoman Culture in the Early Modern Period1
    Greek as Ottoman? Language, identity and mediation of Ottoman culture in the early modern period1 MICHAŁ WASIUCIONEK New Europe College Bucharest/LuxFaSS Abstract The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models between the Ottoman centre and the Christian periphery of the empire. The Danubian principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia witnessed throughout the early modern period a number of linguistic shifts, including the replacement of Slavonic literature with the one written in vernacular. Modern Romanian historiography has portrayed cultural change was a teleological one, triggered by the monetization of economy and the rise of new social classes. What this model fails to explain, though, is the partial retrenchment of vernacular as a literary medium in the eighteenth century, as it faced the stiff competition of Greek. The aim of this paper is to look at the ascendancy of Greek in the Danubian principalities and corresponding socio-economic and political changes through Ottoman lens. Rather than a departure from the developments that facilitated the victory of Romanian over Slavonic, the proliferation of Greek can be interpreted as their continuation, reflecting the growing integration of Moldavian and Wallachian elites into the fabric of the Ottoman Empire at the time when a new socio-political consensus was reaching its maturity. By its association with Ottoman-Orthodox Phanariot elites, the Greek language became an important conduit by which the provincial elites were able to integrate themselves within the larger social fabric, while also importing new models from the imperial centre. Keywords: Ottoman Empire; Danubian principalities; Greek language; Identity; Early Modern Period In 1965, a prominent Romanian medievalist Petre P.
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline1800 18001600
    TIMELINE1800 18001600 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 8000BCE Sharpened stone heads used as axes, spears and arrows. 7000BCE Walls in Jericho built. 6100BCE North Atlantic Ocean – Tsunami. 6000BCE Dry farming developed in Mesopotamian hills. - 4000BCE Tigris-Euphrates planes colonized. - 3000BCE Farming communities spread from south-east to northwest Europe. 5000BCE 4000BCE 3900BCE 3800BCE 3760BCE Dynastic conflicts in Upper and Lower Egypt. The first metal tools commonly used in agriculture (rakes, digging blades and ploughs) used as weapons by slaves and peasant ‘infantry’ – first mass usage of expendable foot soldiers. 3700BCE 3600BCE © PastSearch2012 - T i m e l i n e Page 1 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 3500BCE King Menes the Fighter is victorious in Nile conflicts, establishes ruling dynasties. Blast furnace used for smelting bronze used in Bohemia. Sumerian civilization developed in south-east of Tigris-Euphrates river area, Akkadian civilization developed in north-west area – continual warfare. 3400BCE 3300BCE 3200BCE 3100BCE 3000BCE Bronze Age begins in Greece and China. Egyptian military civilization developed. Composite re-curved bows being used. In Mesopotamia, helmets made of copper-arsenic bronze with padded linings. Gilgamesh, king of Uruk, first to use iron for weapons. Sage Kings in China refine use of bamboo weaponry. 2900BCE 2800BCE Sumer city-states unite for first time. 2700BCE Palestine invaded and occupied by Egyptian infantry and cavalry after Palestinian attacks on trade caravans in Sinai. 2600BCE 2500BCE Harrapan civilization developed in Indian valley. Copper, used for mace heads, found in Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine and Egypt. Sumerians make helmets, spearheads and axe blades from bronze.
    [Show full text]
  • The Historical Review/La Revue Historique
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by National Documentation Centre - EKT journals The Historical Review/La Revue Historique Vol. 11, 2014 Index Hatzopoulos Marios https://doi.org/10.12681/hr.339 Copyright © 2014 To cite this article: Hatzopoulos, M. (2014). Index. The Historical Review/La Revue Historique, 11, I-XCII. doi:https://doi.org/10.12681/hr.339 http://epublishing.ekt.gr | e-Publisher: EKT | Downloaded at 21/02/2020 08:44:40 | INDEX, VOLUMES I-X Compiled by / Compilé par Marios Hatzopoulos http://epublishing.ekt.gr | e-Publisher: EKT | Downloaded at 21/02/2020 08:44:40 | http://epublishing.ekt.gr | e-Publisher: EKT | Downloaded at 21/02/2020 08:44:40 | INDEX Aachen (Congress of) X/161 Académie des Inscriptions et Belles- Abadan IX/215-216 Lettres, Paris II/67, 71, 109; III/178; Abbott (family) VI/130, 132, 138-139, V/79; VI/54, 65, 71, 107; IX/174-176 141, 143, 146-147, 149 Académie des Sciences, Inscriptions et Abbott, Annetta VI/130, 142, 144-145, Belles-Lettres de Toulouse VI/54 147-150 Academy of France I/224; V/69, 79 Abbott, Bartolomew Edward VI/129- Acciajuoli (family) IX/29 132, 136-138, 140-157 Acciajuoli, Lapa IX/29 Abbott, Canella-Maria VI/130, 145, 147- Acciarello VII/271 150 Achaia I/266; X/306 Abbott, Caroline Sarah VI/149-150 Achilles I/64 Abbott, George Frederic (the elder) VI/130 Acropolis II/70; III/69; VIII/87 Abbott, George Frederic (the younger) Acton, John VII/110 VI/130, 136, 138-139, 141-150, 155 Adam (biblical person) IX/26 Abbott, George VI/130 Adams,
    [Show full text]
  • RI 2019 1-6.Pdf
    NOTE FROM THE EDITORS The present issue of “Revista istorică” is a thematic volume dedicated to the topic of “Welfare and Social Practices between Past and Present. The Case-Studies of Southern Italy and Romania.” All the contributions published here are the result of the bilateral project SOS-Net. Social Organization System Network. Transformations of the Institutions and Social Practices of Healthcare and Assistance in Medieval, Modern and Contemporary Europe. The Case-Studies of Southern Italy and Romania, 2017–2019. The partner institutions were the Consiglio Nazionale della Ricerca (CNR), Italy through the ISMED – Istituto di Studi sul Mediterraneo (formerly ISSM), Naples and the Romanian Academy through the “Nicolae Iorga” Institute of History, Bucharest. Dr. Raffaella Salvemini, senior researcher, ISMED, Naples Dr. Mária Pakucs-Willcocks, senior researcher, “Nicolae Iorga” Institute of History, Bucharest REVISTA ISTORICĂ SERIE NOUĂ TOMUL XXX, NR. 1–6 ianuarie – decembrie 2019 SUMAR WELFARE AND SOCIAL PRACTICES BETWEEN PAST AND PRESENT. THE CASE-STUDIES OF SOUTHERN ITALY AND ROMANIA GEMMA COLESANTI, MIRIAM PALOMBA, The Sacrum Infirmarium of the Convent of San Gregorio Armeno .......................................................................................................... 5 MÁRIA PAKUCS-WILLCOCKS, Urban Governance and Welfare in Sixteenth-Century Transylvania......................................................................................................................... 17 VITTORIA FIORELLI, Charité et honneur. Le
    [Show full text]
  • Nationalist Crossroads and Crosshairs: on External and Internal Sources of Albanian and Serbian National Mythology
    Nationalist Crossroads and Crosshairs: On External and Internal Sources of Albanian and Serbian National Mythology Matvey Lomonosov Department of Sociology McGill University, Montreal June 2018 A dissertation submitted to McGill University in partial fulfillment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology © Matvey Lomonosov, 2018 Abstract This dissertation employs comparative historical methods to investigate the development of Albanian and Serbian national identity over the last two centuries. More narrowly, it traces the emergence and evolution of two foundational national myths: the story of the Illyrian origins of the Albanian nation and the narrative of the 1389 Battle of Kosovo. The study focuses on micro- and meso-level processes, the life course of mythmakers and specific historical situations. For this, it relies on archival data from Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro and Serbia, as well as a wide body of published primary and secondary historical sources. The dissertation is composed of four separate articles. In the first article, I offer evidence that the Kosovo myth, which is often seen as a “crucial” supporting case for ethno-symbolist theory, is a modern ideological construct. For evidence, the article focuses on temporal, geographical and cultural ruptures in the supposedly long-standing “medieval Kosovo legacy” and the way the narrative was promoted among South Slavs in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It finds that Serbian-speaking diaspora intellectuals from the Habsburg Empire and the governments in Belgrade and Cetinje played crucial roles imparting the Kosovo myth to the Balkan masses. Thus, it is hard to account for the rise of national identities and local conflicts in the Balkans without a closer look at foreign intervention and the history of states and institutions.
    [Show full text]
  • Vol. II, National Romanticism, the Formation Of
    DISCOURSES OF COLLECTIVE IDENTITY IN CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST EUROPE (1770–1945) TEXTS AND COMMENTARIES VOLUME II NATIONAL ROMANTICISM – THE FORMATION OF NATIONAL MOVEMENTS DISCOURSES OF COLLECTIVE IDENTITY IN CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST EUROPE (1770–1945) TEXTS AND COMMENTARIES EDITORIAL COMMITTEE AHMET ERSOY, MACIEJ GÓRNY, VANGELIS KECHRIOTIS, MICHAL KOPEČEK, BOYAN MANCHEV, BALÁZS TRENCSÉNYI, MARIUS TURDA DISCOURSES OF COLLECTIVE IDENTITY IN CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST EUROPE (1770–1945) TEXTS AND COMMENTARIES VOLUME II NATIONAL ROMANTICISM – THE FORMATION OF NATIONAL MOVEMENTS Edited by Balázs Trencsényi and Michal Kopeček CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY PRESS Budapest • New York ©2007 by Ahmet Ersoy, Maciej Górny, Vangelis Kechriotis, Michal Kopeček, Boyan Manchev, Balázs Trencsényi, Marius Turda Published in 2007 by Central European University Press An imprint of the Central European University Share Company Nádor utca 11, H-1051 Budapest, Hungary Tel: +36-1-327-3138 or 327-3000 Fax: +36-1-327-3183 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ceupress.com 400 West 59th Street, New York NY 10019, USA Tel: +1-212-547-6932 Fax: +1-646-557-2416 E-mail: [email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the permission of the Publisher. ISBN 963 7326 60 X cloth 978-963-7326-60-8 Series ISBN 963 7326 51 0 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Discourses of collective identity in Central and Southeast Europe (1770–1945) : texts and commentaries / edited by Balázs Trencsényi and Michal Kopecek. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-10: 9637326529 (v.
    [Show full text]
  • Balcanica Xliv
    BALCANICA XLIV BALCANICA XLIV, Belgrade 2013, 1–472 UDC 930.85(4–12) ISSN 0350–7653 SERBIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES AND ARTS INSTITUTE FOR BALKAN STUDIES BALCANICA XLIV ANNUAL OF THE INSTITUTE FOR BALKAN STUDIES Editor DUŠAN T. BATAKOVIĆ Director of the Institute for Balkan Studies SASA Editorial Board FRANCIS CONTE (Paris), DJORDJE S. KOSTIĆ, LJUBOMIR MAKSIMOVIĆ, DANICA POPOVIĆ, GABRIELLA SCHUBERT (Jena), BILJANA SIKIMIĆ, ANTHONY-EMIL TACHIAOS (Thessaloniki), NIKOLA TASIĆ, SVETLANA M. TOLSTAJA (Moscow) BELGRADE 2013 Publisher Institute for Balkan Studies Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Belgrade, Knez Mihailova 35/IV www.balkaninstitut.com e-mail: [email protected] The origin of the Institute goes back to the Institut des Études balkaniques founded in Belgrade in 1934 as the only of the kind in the Balkans. The initiative came from King Alexander I Karadjordjević, while the Institute’s scholarly profile was created by Ratko Parežanin and Svetozar Spanaćević. The Institute published Revue internationale des Études balkaniques, which assembled most prominent European experts on the Balkans in various disciplines. Its work was banned by the Nazi occupation authorities in 1941. The Institute was not re-established until 1969, under its present-day name and under the auspices of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. It assembled a team of scholars to cover the Balkans from prehistory to the modern age and in a range of different fields of study, such as archaeology, ethnography, anthropology, history, culture, art, literature, law. This multidisciplinary approach remains its long-term orientation. Volume XLIV of the annual Balcanica is printed with financial support from the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia CONTENTS ARTICLES ARCHAEOLOGY.
    [Show full text]
  • Advices to a Phanariot Candidate for the Grand Dragomanate
    ADVICES TO A PHANARIOT CANDIDATE FOR THE GRAND DRAGOMANATE AND VOIVODASHIP OF THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: BE-NÂM-I HAVÂRİYYÛN-I BÜRÛC-I FÜNÛN OF EBÛBEKİR KÂNÎ EFENDİ by MUHAMMET TALHA KATIRCI Submitted to the Graduate School of Social Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Sabancı University January 2020 © Muhammet Talha Katırcı 2020 All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT ADVICES TO A PHANARIOT CANDIDATE FOR THE GRAND DRAGOMANATE AND VOIVODASHIP OF THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: BE-NÂM-I HAVÂRİYYÛN-I BÜRÛC-I FÜNÛN OF EBÛBEKİR KÂNÎ EFENDİ MUHAMMET TALHA KATIRCI HISTORY M.A THESIS, JANUARY 2020 Thesis Supervisor: Asst. Prof. Ayşe Ozil Keywords: The Mavrocordatos Family, Constantine Mavrocordatos, Phanariot Greeks, Mirror for Princes This thesis examines Be-nâm-ı Havâriyyûn-ı Bürûc-ı Fünûn, an eighteenth-century work of prose, written by the Ottoman literary figure and bureaucrat Ebûbekir Kânî Efendi (1712-1791). It was written for a member of the Mavrocordatos family, one of the prominent Phanariot families, which filled the positions of the grand dragomanate and voivodaship of the Danubian Principalities. While the linguistic function of Bürûc-ı Fünûn has been largely emphasized in the secondary literature, this study explores the characteristics of the text in terms of nasîhatnâme (book of advice) literature. The thesis also makes assumptions about the authorship of Ebûbekir Kânî based on a newly discovered manuscript of the text which is of the earliest date of issue. The thesis also inquires about which Mavrocordatos Bürûc-ı Fünûn was written for. Accordingly, it attempts to understand the motives of the Mavrocordatos family within the Ottoman-Phanariot world and the inner dynamics of the Ottoman upper administration.
    [Show full text]
  • UA Campus Repository
    A history of Romanian historical writing Item Type Book Authors Kellogg, Frederick Publisher C. Schlacks Download date 07/10/2021 14:16:11 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/316020 r 1 UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 111 111 1 1111 39001029167551 A 2(6.7 i4\14c- i5w)A HISTORY OF ROMANIAN HISTORICAL WRITING Frederick jCellogg Charles Schlacks, Jr., Publisher Bakersfield, California Charles Schlacks, Jr., Publisher Arts and Sciences California State University, Bakersfield 9001 Stockdale Highway Bakersfield, California 93311-1099 Copyright ©1990 by Frederick Kellogg All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: Kellogg, Frederick. A history of Romanian historical writing / Frederick Kellogg. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. 1. Romanian-Historiography. I. Title DR216.7.K45 1990 949.8'0072-dc20 89-70330 CIP Frederick Kellogg is Associate Professor of History at the University of Arizona. CONTENTS Preface vii Illustrations (Before page 1) 1 Early Historical Writing in the Romanian Lands 1 2 Modern Romanian Historical Writing 24 3 Contemporary Romanian Historical Writing 52 4 Foreign Views on Romanian History 71 5 Resources and Organization of Romanian Historical Research 95 6 Current Needs of Romanian Historiography 107 APPENDICES A.Brief Chronology of the Carpatho-Danubian Region 111 B.Map of the Carpatho-Danubian Region 117 Bibliography 119 Index 129 TABLE OF ILLUSTRATIONS (before page 1) 1. The Stolnic Constantin Cantacuzino (1640-1716) 2. Dimitrie Cantemir (1673-1723) 3. Petru Maior (1761-1821) 4. Gheorghe Sincai (1754-1816) 5. Nicolae Balcescu (1819-1852) 6. Mihail Kogalniceanu (1817-1891) 7. Andrei Saguna (1809-1873) 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright by Altina Hoti 2019
    Copyright by Altina Hoti 2019 The Dissertation Committee for Altina Hoti Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Nationalism, Cosmopolitanism, and Female Intellectuality: The Paradoxes of Dora D’Istria and the Gendering of Risorgimento Italy Committee: Daniela Bini Carter, Supervisor Gabriella Romani Douglas Biow Alexandra K. Wettlaufer Guy Raffa Nationalism, Cosmopolitanism, and Female Intellectuality: The Paradoxes of Dora D’Istria and the Gendering of Risorgimento Italy by Altina Hoti Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin December 2019 Dedication I would like to dedicate this dissertation to my parents, my husband, and my family, all of whom have patiently supported and guided me throughout my academic career. A special thank you goes to my grandfather whose passion for knowledge, history, and culture continues to inspire and motivate me. Acknowledgements I would like to extend my sincerest gratitude to my supervisor Professor Daniela Bini who so very patiently guided and encouraged me throughout this project. I also owe a lot to Professors Gabriella Romani, Douglas Biow, Alexandra Wettlaufer, and Guy Raffa. Their knowledge, expertise, and mentorship have been vital to my dissertation writing process, helping me find new paths to explore and develop in the future. To our graduate coordinator, Jessica Luhn, I am infinitely thankful for all the assistance during my graduate school journey. Finally, I would like to acknowledge the help and support of all of my colleagues and friends.
    [Show full text]
  • CROMOHS Vol 21 (2017–2018) Table of Contents
    CROMOHS Vol 21 (2017–2018) Full Issue View or download the full issue PDF Table of Contents From Comparative to Global History: Assessing Relational Approaches to the Past Ed. by Giovanni Tarantino Foreword PDF Giovanni Tarantino Entanglements, Political Communication, PDF and Shared Temporal Layers Margrit Pernau and Luc Wodzicki 1-17 Disciplinarity and Forgetfulness: PDF On the Older Historiography of Global Connections Henning Trüper 18-29 Forum Circulation of People, Circulation of Objects, across South Eastern Europe and the Ottoman Empire, Seventeenth to Nineteenth Centuries ed. by Giulia Calvi Introduction PDF Giulia Calvi 30-35 ‘This is their profession:’ Greek Merchants in Transylvania PDF at the End of the Seventeenth Century Maria Pakucs 36-54 Healing, Translating, Collecting. Doctor Michelangelo Tilli PDF across the Ottoman Empire (1683-85) Giulia Calvi 55-69 Greek as Ottoman? Greek Language, Ottoman Empire PDF and the Danubian Principalities Michał Wasiucionek 70-89 ‘Le Coquin Grec’ vs. ‘le Véritable François.’ Being a Foreigner PDF in the Danubian Principalities, Eighteenth Century Constanţa Vintilă-Ghiţulescu 90-105 Iordache Filipescu, the ‘Last Great Boyar’ of Wallachia and His Heritage: A World PDF of Power, Influence and Goods Nicoleta Roman 106-122 Historians and Their Craft Interview with Sanjay Subrahmanyam PDF Daniel Barbu 123-132 Global Intellectual History: Some Reflections on Recent Publications PDF Ann Thomson 133-138 Reviews and Critical Notes Belich, J., J. Darwin, M. Frenz, C. Wickham, eds, The Prospect of Global PDF History, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016 Serena Ferente 139-142 Calasso, Giovanna and Giuliano Lancioni, eds, Dār al-islām/dār al-ḥarb. PDF Territories, People, Identities, Leiden-Boston: Brill 2017 Caterina Bori 143-149 Cohen-Hanegbi, Naama and Piroska Nagy, eds.
    [Show full text]