“In the Streets, You See Nothing but Muslims!”
Unbound Slavery and Urban Belonging in the Spanish Mediterranean (Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries)
https://t.co/lbJWRW1jre
✨New Open-Access Dataset ✨
Just published a dataset of all commodities arriving in Valencia from Maghribi ports (1530-1640) drawing on data from the Arxiu del Regne
Hope it can be of use to historians of material culture/trade/the Mediterranean !
✨After 3+ years of cohabitation with Joan Seguí and his diary....
I am happy to share my latest article on travel knowledge in the late 16c Mediterranean (@Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 38, n°1)
https://t.co/LuT841vDH7
Today is the official publication day for my book, “On Earth or in Poems: The Many Lives of al-Andalus” (@Harvard_Press), which explores how the memory of al-Andalus has shaped culture and politics around the world. Please help me spread the word! https://t.co/n9v3uVAPwo.
🗓️ Bookmark your calendars for next 31st March 🗓️
to find out about the travels of wax&honey, captive objects and materia medica in the early modern Mediterranean🍯
w/@kaohu11, Daniel Hershenzon and Alexandra Sapoznik @RSAorg 🥳
Weirdly back looking at ship graffiti again. I thought I'd written everything I wanted to on the subject. Apparently not.
A tiny selection of the over 450 examples now recorded in UK churches.
UPenn is giving 40% discount on the The Captive Sea with this coupon code: MESA40-FM
The code is valid through November 17, and you could find the book at the MESA 2020 virtual exhibit store here: https://t.co/wgMYbCfIzX
Son book review'um. Kölelerin ve esaretin Kuzey Afrika ile Avrupa'yı nasıl birbirine bağladığını inceleyen güzel bir kitap, herkese tavsiye ederim.
The Captive Sea: Sea: Slavery, Communication, and Commerce in Early M…' to @academia! https://t.co/Z1WD0Gb7qV