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History of the Adriatic

A Sea and Its Civilization

Egidio Ivetic

$51.95

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English
Polity Press
27 May 2022
The Adriatic is ‘the small Mediterranean’ – a sea within a sea, part of the Mediterranean and at the same time detached from it, a largely enclosed sea with stunning coastlines and a long history of commercial, political and cultural exchange. Silent witness to the flow of civilizations, the Adriatic is the meeting point of East and West where many empires had their frontiers and some overlapped.  With Italy on one side and the Balkans on the other, the Adriatic is the area where the Latin West became intertwined with the Greek and Ottoman East.

This book tells the history of the Adriatic from the first cultures of the Neolithic Age through to the present day. All of the great civilizations and cultures that bordered and crossed the Adriatic are discussed: Ancient Greece and Rome, Byzantium and the Holy Roman Empire, Venice and the Ottomans, Catholicism, Orthodox Christianity and Islam. Byzantium was replaced by Venice, queen of the Adriatic, which reached its zenith at the beginning of the sixteenth century and maintained commercial and military hegemony in its Gulf, sharing the sea with the Turks, the Habsburgs, the Pope and the Spanish vice-kingdom of Naples. It was Napoleon who ended Venice’s reign in 1797. In the nineteenth century, the Austrian Empire prevailed, and Central Europe reached the Mediterranean through the Adriatic. United Italy placed its most symbolic frontier in the eastern Adriatic, clashing with Austria-Hungary in the First World War. The twentieth century was marked by the prolonged conflicts and eventually peace between Yugoslavia, Albania and Italy. Today the Adriatic is a region increasingly integrated into the European Union, experiencing a new era of cooperation following the dramatic collapse of Yugoslavia.

Across centuries, this book illustrates the rich cultural and artistic heritage of diverse civilizations as they left their mark on the cities, shores and states of the Adriatic.

By:  
Imprint:   Polity Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 160mm,  Spine: 38mm
Weight:   748g
ISBN:   9781509552528
ISBN 10:   1509552529
Pages:   380
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Table of contents:Preface Introduction: The Historical Sense of a Sea Chapter 1: A Minimal Mediterranean Chapter 2: The Upper Sea (1000 BC-500 AD) Chapter 3: The Third Antiquity (500-1000) Chapter 4: The Carrier Sea (1000-1500) Chapter 5: The Antemural (1500-1797) Chapter 6: Imperial Borders, National Frontiers (1797-1914) Chapter 7: Contrasts and Integrations (1914-2018) Appendix Notes Index

Egidio Ivetic is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Padua.

Reviews for History of the Adriatic: A Sea and Its Civilization

"""a definitive history of this ancient body of water and the people who lived around it and sailed upon it… an exceptionally well researched, written, organized and presented work of meticulous scholarship… unreservedly recommended"" Midwest Book Review ""This is a deeply interesting yet also intimate gulf, a storied sea within the greater tale of the Mediterranean — much-contested, much-trafficked waters quietly awash with epics all of their own."" The Irish Times “For Fernand Braudel, the Mediterranean’s most famous biographer, the Adriatic was ‘perhaps the most unified of all the regions of the Mediterranean Sea’. But it still posed ‘all the problems implicit in the study of the whole Mediterranean.’ A Mediterranean within the Mediterranean. Egidio Ivetic tackles those problems head on in his long awaited History of the Adriatic. Following the model laid out by Braudel in his 1949 study of the Mediterranean, Ivetic explores the history of the Adriatic as a single historical space.” History Today "


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