Ebook: Where Three Worlds Met: Sicily in the Early Medieval Mediterranean
Author: Sarah Davis-Secord
- Tags: Business & Professional Growth, Christian Living, Church History, Churches & Church Leadership, History, Biblical History & Culture, Church History, Historical Theology, Economic History, Economics, Business & Money, Italy, Europe, History, Islam, Religious, World, History, Christianity, Religious, World, History, General, Religious, World, History, History, Islam, Religion & Spirituality, History, Religious Studies, Religion & Spirituality, Economics, Economic Theory, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Business & Finance, New Used &
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: Cornell University Press
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- epub
In Where Three Worlds Met, Sarah Davis-Secord investigates Sicily's place within the religious, diplomatic, military, commercial, and intellectual networks of the Mediterranean by tracing the patterns of travel, trade, and communication among Christians (Latin and Greek), Muslims, and Jews. By looking at the island across this long expanse of time and during the periods of transition from one dominant culture to another, Davis-Secord uncovers the patterns that defined and redefined the broader Muslim-Christian encounter in the Middle Ages.
Sicily was a nexus for cross-cultural communication not because of its geographical placement at the center of the Mediterranean but because of the specific roles the island played in a variety of travel and trade networks in the Mediterranean region. Complex combinations of political, cultural, and economic need transformed Sicily’s patterns of connection to other nearby regions―transformations that were representative of the fundamental shifts that took place in the larger Mediterranean system during the Middle Ages. The meanings and functions of Sicily’s positioning within these larger Mediterranean communications networks depended on the purposes to which the island was being put and how it functioned at the boundaries of the Greek, Latin, and Muslim worlds.