Mediterranean Studies is an interdisciplinary annual concerned with the ideas and ideals of Mediterranean cultures from Late Antiquity to the Enlightenment and their influence beyond these geographical and temporal boundaries. Topics concerning any aspect of the history, literature, politics, arts, geography, or any subject focused on the Mediterranean region in any period of history can be found in this journal.
250; EC. Lane, 'Exportations vénitiennes d'or et d'argent de 1200 a 1450', in J. Day (ed.), Etudes d 'histoire mone'taire (Lille, 1984), and repr. in EC. Lane, Studies in Venetian Social and Economic History, ed. B.G. Kohl and RC.
The cutting-edge papers in this collection reflect the wide areas to which John Pryor has made significant contributions in the course of his scholarly career.
Table of Contents: Preface; William A. Ward (1928-1996); Bibliography of William A. Ward; The Absolute Date of the Montet Jar Scarabs (Daphna Ben-Tor); A Funerary Address to the High-priest Harmakhis...
This is an interdisciplinary journal published on behalf of the Mediterranean Studies Association.
How does our understanding of commedia dell' arte change if we see it through the lens of Mediterranean Studies? How can the work of Braudel, and later Horden and Purcell, Vitkus and Durstler shed even more light on commedia dell'arte?
Mediterranean Studies in Honor of R. Ross Holloway Derek Counts, Anthony Tuck ... Many of the proposed theories, evidently, focus on isolatingthe Assos architrave frieze toexplain itaway, rather than integrating and contextualizingit.
An investigation of a Roman road-station in its archaeological and geographical context that provides a new perspective on the historical landscape of southern Anatolia.
This book will be an invaluable resource for students and scholars of the Middle East, Women and Gender studies and Mediterranean Studies.
This collection of essays offers the first ever comparative approach to ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern traditions of lament.
The cutting-edge essays in this volume examine what it means for medieval and early modern Iberia and its people to be considered as part of the Mediterranean.