IMIS

Publicaties | Instituten | Personen | Datasets | Projecten | Kaarten | Infrastructuur
[ meld een fout in dit record ]mandje (0): toevoegen | toon Print deze pagina

Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries
Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) (2019). Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7. Brill: Leiden. ISBN 978-90-04-36431-8. 300 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004397682
Deel van: Brill's Studies in Maritime History. Brill: Leiden. ISSN 2405-4917, meer

Beschikbaar in  Auteur 
    VLIZ: Maritime history [107053]

Auteur  Top 
  • Walsh, M.J.K., redacteur

Inhoud
  • Walsh, M.J.K. (2019). "Old ships [sail] like swans asleep… for Famagusta and the hidden sun, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 1-42, meer
  • Bacci, M. (2019). A holy site for sailors: our lady of the cave in Famagusta, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 43-71, meer
  • Borowski, T. (2019). Placed in the midst of enemies? Material evidence for the existence of maritime cultural networks connecting fourteenth-century Famagusta with overseas regions in Europa, Africa and Asia, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 72-112, meer
  • Carr, M. (2019). Between the papal court and the islamic world: Famagusta and Cypriot merchants in the fourteenth century, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 113-129, meer
  • Musarra, A. (2019). The role of Famagusta in Genoese maritime routes between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 130-143, meer
  • Claverie, P.-V. (2019). Starting point of the Genoese thalassocracy in Cyprus: an unpublished roll of knights and squires imprisoned in Famagusta in 1374, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 144-158, meer
  • Coureas, N. (2019). The export of soap and olive oil from the port of Famagusta in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 159-169, meer
  • Usta, A. (2019). Maritime slave trading in the fourteenth-century Famagusta, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 170-183, meer
  • Usta, A. (2019). Sea defenses in the Renaissance: Famagusta in comparative Venetian perspective, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 184-199, meer
  • Spates, W. (2019). Power, peril and maritime-trade wish fulfillment in Thomas Dekker's The pleasant comedy of old fortunatus, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 200-217, meer
  • Bonato, L. (2019). The harbor of Famagusta during the Ottoman period in French Travelogues and consular archives, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 218-238, meer
  • Tozan, A. (2019). The development of Famagusta harbor during the British colonial period (1878-1960), in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 239-263, meer
  • Kiessel, M. (2019). Famagusta on Cyprus and the sea: hotel architecture, urban development and tourism during the British colonial and early postcolonial period, in: Walsh, M.J.K. (Ed.) Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, merchants, pilgrims and mercenaries. Brill's Studies in Maritime History, 7: pp. 264-296, meer

Abstract
    Famagusta Maritima: Mariners, Merchants, Pilgrims and Mercenaries presents a collection of scholarly studies spanning the thousand year history of the port of Famagusta in Cyprus. This historic harbour city was at the heart of the Crusading Lusignan dynasty, a possession of both Genoa and Venice during the Renaissance, a port of the Ottoman Empire for three centuries, and in time, a strategic naval and intelligence node for the British Empire. It is a maritime space made famous by the realities of its extraordinary importance and influence, followed by its calamitous demise.

Alle informatie in het Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) valt onder het VLIZ Privacy beleid Top | Auteur