- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > History / World
基本説明
The fourteen essays give an overview of the material, highlighting any problems the historian may have in dealing with it, and provide detailed bibliographical surveys. Latin, Arabic, Jewish, Slavonic, Georgian, Armenian and Syriac sources are all discussed.
Full Description
These essays survey the range of historical sources from the peoples who collided with the Byzantine Empire during this period of dramatic upheaval.
The Empire that had been expanded and consolidated by Basil II (d. 1025) was to disintegrate in the face of incursions from the north and Muslim east. In addition, pilgrims and crusaders from the west passed through the Empire and settled - culminating in the capture of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade in 1204. In order to understand the history of the region during this period, one must be aware of the rich source material created by these shifting populations, in a wide range of languages, and with differing traditions of historical writing.
The fourteen essays give an overview of the material, highlighting any problems the historian may have in dealing with it, and provide detailed bibliographical surveys. Latin, Arabic, Jewish, Slavonic, Georgian, Armenian and Syriac sources are all discussed.
This invaluable reference work offers new approaches for all those working on the meeting of the Christian and Muslim worlds in this period.
Contents
Preface
PBW: the project and the colloquium
Pilgrims and crusaders in western Latin sources
Crusader sources from the Near East (1099 1204)
Latin sources and Byzantine prosopography: Genoa, Venice, Pisa and Barcelona
The Venetian chronicles and archives as sources for the history of Byzantium and the crusades (992-1204)
Venice: a bibliography
The south Italian sources
Visitors from north-western Europe to Byzantium. Vernacular sources: problems and perspectives
Slavonic sources
Georgian sources
Armenian sources
Syriac historiographical sources
Sources in Arabic
Arabic sources for Sicily
Jewish sources



