Book Details
Orange Code:95584
Paperback:374 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. The topic and the sources2. The shrinking empire and the Byzantine dilemma between East and West after the Fourth Crusade3. Social organization, historical developments, and political attitudes in Thessalonike: an overview (1382–1430)4. Byzantine Thessalonike (1382–1387 and 1403–1423)5. Thessalonike under foreign rule6. The Byzantine court and the Ottomans: conflict and accommodation7. The first challenge: Bayezid I’s siege of Constantinople (1394–1402)8. From recovery to subjugation: the last fifty years of Byzantine rule in Constantinople (1403–1453)9. The early years of Palaiologan rule in the Morea (1382–1407)10. The final years of the Byzantine Morea (1407–1460)
Description:
This is a detailed analysis of Byzantine political attitudes towards the Ottomans and western Europeans during the critical last century of Byzantium. The book covers three major regions of the Byzantine Empire - Thessalonike, Constantinople, and the Morea - where the political orientations of aristocrats, merchants, the urban populace, peasants, and members of ecclesiastical and monastic circles are examined against the background of social and economic conditions. Through its particular focus on the political and religious dispositions of individuals, families and social groups, the book offers an original view of late Byzantine politics and society that is not found in conventional narratives. Drawing on a wide range of Byzantine, western and Ottoman sources, it authoritatively illustrates how late Byzantium was drawn into an Ottoman system in spite of the westward-looking orientation of the majority of its ruling elite.
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