The Mercenary Mediterranean_ Sovereignty, Religion, and Violence in the Medieval Crown of Aragon - Hussein Fancy
2 introduction Aragon Castile Naṣrids Marīnids Ḥafṣids ‘Abd al-Wādids Jaume I ( 1213 – 76 ) Ferdinand III ( 1217 – 52 ) Muḥammad ...
a mercenary logic 3 It is the nature of archival research, however, that one can follow a nar- rative thread like this, stitched ...
4 introduction kings of the Crown of Aragon recruited thousands of foreign Muslim sol- diers from al- Andalus (Muslim Iberia) an ...
a mercenary logic 5 that of Islam.^11 In this respect, recent efforts within Mediterranean studies to overcome such divisions ar ...
6 introduction conceptions of the relationship between divine and human authority, be- tween theology and law, circulated within ...
a mercenary logic 7 year of the incarnation rather than the regnal year of France. More than by ambition, however, the Aragonese ...
8 introduction a series of legal, fiscal, and administrative reforms that imagined the king as the ultimate source of the law an ...
a mercenary logic 9 rights against the Aragonese kings’ claims to supreme authority, forcing these kings repeatedly to capitulat ...
10 introduction tendencies of the prevailing Muslim orthodoxies of North Africa. His fol- lowers took the name the Almohads (al- ...
a mercenary logic 11 The territorial and ideological strength of the Almohads, however, did not hold. At the Battle of Las Navas ...
12 introduction between the Aragonese kings and each of these successor states but also brings to light a critical, triangular t ...
a mercenary logic 13 the Ghuzāh leaders and soldiers in their lands. Moreover, the Aragonese kings agreed to and accepted limits ...
14 introduction and why did the Aragonese kings rely on soldiers who had and would again threaten their lands to serve in their ...
a mercenary logic 15 evidence for the transfer of certain imperial conceptions and practices from the Islamic to the Christian M ...
chapter one Etymologies and Etiologies T he scholar reading through the chancery registers in the Archive of the Crown of Aragon ...
etymologies and etiologies 17 that although the word jenet derived from the name of the Berber tribe, by the thirteenth century ...
18 chapter one about Othello: “[Y]ou’ll have /coursers for cousins and jennets for ger- mans!”^11 The breeding of jennet horses ...
etymologies and etiologies 19 gave cavalry soldiers the striking appearance of having their legs trussed beneath them, like chic ...
20 chapter one Ibn Ḥayyān (d. 1097 ), lightly armored Berber troops rode on saddles with low pommels, the so- called sarj ‘udwiy ...
etymologies and etiologies 21 even if the Berber Zanāta inspired the term, it does not follow that the thirteenth- century jenet ...
«
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
»
Free download pdf