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ePub Possessing the Land: Aragon's Expansion Into Islam's Ebro Frontier Under Alfonso the Battler 1104-1134 (Medieval Mediterranean: Peoples, Economies and Cultures, 400-1500) download

by Stalls

ePub Possessing the Land: Aragon's Expansion Into Islam's Ebro Frontier Under Alfonso the Battler 1104-1134 (Medieval Mediterranean: Peoples, Economies and Cultures, 400-1500) download
Author:
Stalls
ISBN13:
978-9004103672
ISBN:
9004103678
Language:
Publisher:
Brill (September 1, 1995)
Category:
Subcategory:
Humanities
ePub file:
1782 kb
Fb2 file:
1827 kb
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Rating:
4.8
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383

by Stalls · data of the book Possessing the Land: Aragon's. details (United States). ISBN: 978-90-04-10367-2.

by Stalls · data of the book Possessing the Land: Aragon's. ISBN-10: 90-04-10367-8.

In six chapters Stalls furnishes first a sketch of Alfonso's conquest of that taifa, then a treatment in turn of his role in the administration of that conquest, of the role of the new Christian nobility there, of that of new Christian settlers of humbler status, of the place of the post-conquest Christian church, and finally of the continuing significance of.

Possessing the Land" is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragon's expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon. Based on an extensive examination of primary and secondary sources, the book's insights into the social and political processes of Christian settlement and the fate of post-conquest Islam are of particular importance. Possessing the Land" is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragon's expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon.

Daniel Potthast - 2015 - Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 92 (2):367-412. El Islam en los Dialogui de Pedro Alfonso. Alfredo Ballestín - 2003 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 10. The Will of Alfonso I, "El Batallador," King of Aragon and Navarre: A Reassessment. Elena Lourie - 1975 - Speculum 50 (4):635-651. La stratégie intellectuelle d'expansion islamique du VIIIe au XIIIe siècle.

Possessing the Land is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragon's expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon.

Possessing The Land book. Possessing the Land is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian. Possessing the Land is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragon's expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon.

Possessing the Land is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragons expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon. Based on an extensive examination of primary and secondary sources, the books insights into the social and political processes of Christian settlement and the fate of post-conquest Islam are of particular importance.

Possessing the Land: Aragon's Expansion Into Islam's Ebro Frontier under Alfonso the Battler, 1104–1134. Viguera Molins, María Jesús (2000). Villegas-Aristizábal, Lucas (2009).

Peoples, Economies and Cultures, 400–1500 (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2003). tenth century . October 1997 · The American.

Possessing the Land is the first comprehensive treatment of Christian Aragon's expansion under Alfonso I (1104-1134) into a major arena of medieval Christian/Islamic contact: the Islamic Ebro River march of Aragon. Based on an extensive examination of primary and secondary sources, the book's insights into the social and political processes of Christian settlement and the fate of post-conquest Islam are of particular importance. Its conclusions that the freeholding of land characterized the Ebro's Christian settlement, and not heavy seignorialization, and that Christian settlement relied on the Muslim infrastructure, challenge significantly the neo-Marxist thesis of the "feudalization" of twelfth-century Christian Iberian society and the corresponding Christian break with Iberia's Islamic Past. This book constitutes a fundamental work in Iberian frontier studies.