Trip to Otherness: Release of Captives through Merchants on the Island of Mallorca in the 15 th Century (original) (raw)

Arabs and Persians, making of Self and Other through foodways at the times of Shuʿubiya (Iraq, 9th-10th centuries)

The Shu'ubiya was an internal movement of the medieval Islamic society, struggling against any kind of Arab primacy. During the 9th and 10th centuries this conflict between Shu'ubites (mainly Persians) and the anti-shu'ubites (defending Arab primacy) became an important topic of the Arab literature and produced famous anti-shu'ubite literature. These works propound a definition of the Self (Arab) and the Other (Persian) and so a cultural, social, and moral portrait of the Arabs and the Persians. Food and foodways were one of the criteria which distinguished the Arabs from the Persians according to these authors. We can therefore study the making of otherness through their work. What were the distinctive type of food or foodways among Arabs and Persians? Can foodways be a relevant subject of research for identity construction?

From Illuminated Satire to Sculpted Amorality. The Bestial Acts Attributed to Jews and Muslims, in Jewish and Sephardic Otherness in Space and Architecture at International Medieval Congress (Leeds, Institute for Medieval Studies - Faculty of Arts, 3-6 July 2017)

The paper will examine illuminated scenes and sculpted iconographic devices whose protagonists are anthropomorphic animals or beasts. It will be highlighted the influence which ideas concerning Jews' and Muslims' alleged faults and flaws had on the characterisation of animal-shaped figures; also, how a number of caricatures hid the fear of moral subversion while attempting to exorcise social disorder; and lastly, the points of contact between the satirical and discrediting function of animal presences in illuminations, and the alienating and derisory effect introduced into religious architecture by the transfiguration of the Enemy, sculpted into a beast-like being. This session will focus on the depiction of Jewish Otherness in architecture. It will focus on the sculptural and painted decorations showing Jewish dance, flowers, plants, and animals related to Jewish tradition, Hebrew and Hebraic inscriptions which show foreign tradition regarding Christian tradition in Europe. The focus is set on the link between private and public spaces, political, economic and cross-cultural relationships focusing on the architectural and spatial construction of Jewish and Christian otherness and identity during the Middle Ages (1215-1500).

Preaching Christ from a Transcultural Standpoint: The Homiliary of Luculentius, The Oldest Indigenous Work of Carolingian Text Culture in Early Medieval Catalonia (ca. 900), Society for the Medieval Mediterranean, 6th Biennial Conference, Barcelona, Institut d'Estudis Catalans, July 9, 2019

In the twenty-first century, the chance to re-discover, edit and study a quasi-unknown and disregarded Latin text from the early Middle Ages is absolutely rare. The Homiliary of Luculentius offers such a rare opportunity and all indicators at present favour our hypothesis that this important source, known at present only from selected fragments, is a rarity in the proper sense: it is obviously the earliest indigenous Latin monument of early medieval Catalonia, the north-eastern part of the Iberian Peninsula dominated by the Carolingians and their culture. Our paper presents this work, its sources and the religious, social and political contexts of the monastic author and his knowledge network. The specific features of this work show how patristic and Carolingian text cultures were transferred to and used in an Iberian transcultural frontier society under construction in order to meet the many (inter)religious and cultural challenges this still underrated periphery of Charlemagne’s Empire was confronted with.

Dinamiche e politiche socio-urbanistiche durante un periodo di crisi a Castell de Càller agli inizi del XV secolo

Abstract Gli anni a cavallo tra il XIV e il XV secolo sono cruciali per mutamenti socio-culturali e istituzionali. Castell de Càller, durante le prime decadi del Quattrocento, vive una nuova fase della propria esistenza, tentando di ricostruire e sviluppare una propria fisionomia urbanistica e sociale. Per tentare di ricostruirne le dinamiche si analizzeranno nella relazione alcuni dati riguardanti le botigie, le abitazioni e le enfiteusi. Abstract The years between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries are crucial for socio-cultural and institutional changes. Castell de Càller, during the first decades of the fifteenth century, is experiencing a new phase of its existence, attempting to rebuild and develop its own social and urban physiognomy. In order to groped to reconstruct these dynamics we analyze some data on botigie, homes and enfiteusi (lease).

REIXACH SALA, Albert, TELLO HERNÁNDEZ, Esther, «Catalan Bankers in the Fourteenth Century: A First Census», Summa, Revista de Cultures Medievals, 7 (2016), p. 205-235

This essay focuses on money-changers or owners of private money-changing tables (taules de canvi) in Catalonia between approximately 1280 and 1400. It places them among the group of financial agents (specially with regard to public administrations), and it stresses the particularities of the institutions ruled by them. Additionally, it includes a first census of the more than a hundred bankers documented in the Principality of Catalonia during the aforementioned period. Besides remarking some of their characteristics they have in common, the essay also presents several proposals to conduct in-depth studies of this group

Beyond Pure Domination: Building Communal Identities in Catalan Baronial Lands During the Late Middle Ages

That the increasing fiscal pressure of monarchs facilitated the emergence of local identities in Late Medieval Catalonia is commonly accepted, particularly in respect to urban soil. However, there is comparatively much less knowledge of the chances of this happening in those Catalan estates under baronial lordship. A mere glance at sources issued by public notaries subjected to the authority of those high nobles reveals that, at least in some cases, local communities evolved similarly to their royal counterparts, thus developing legal personalities that preserved their communal traits and made them capable of defending themselves against abuse or limiting further seigneurial demands. In these baronial contexts, local communal identities and their legal personalities appear to have adopted a public discourse that not only exposed a clear, respectful, and therefore cautious recognition of the reality of power relationships, but also tell us much about negotiation processes that initially are not expected from feudal nobility. Yet those identities arose of an acknowledgement that the future of noble lordship in such an age of crisis would depend mainly on fostering acceptancy by granting privileges. In return, barons may even have relied on this strategy to obtain immediate political and military support when necessary. The estates of the viscounts of Cabrera (one of the more powerful and long-lasting lineages of the Medieval Catalan high nobility) provide us with some instances of this kind. In this sense, the aim of this paper is to show when and how communal identities began to emerge in the Cabrera states; in which manner they used discourse to ensure that their otherwise evolving legal personalities were respected; and, finally, how their building strengthened bonds between viscounts and subjects to the extent of creating a true belief in the legitimacy of defending the former against whatever foe, even the king himself.

Between peace and war in the Mediterranean: reconsidering peace treaties with Islam in the Late Middle Ages

The objective of this paper is to conduct a systematic analysis of the content and formal, stylistic and linguistic diversity of the peace treaties signed between the Crown of Aragon and the Islamic sultanates of the Western Mediterranean in the Late Middle Ages through the confrontation of Christian and Arab sources, together with their coetaneous translations. This approach will allow us a better understanding not only of the nature of these contacts, but also of the conceptual and cultural horizon in which the peace treaties were signed, still largely unknown.