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Blessing Patricia, Goshgarian Rachel (eds.) Architecture and Landscape in Medieval Anatolia, 1100-1500

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Blessing Patricia, Goshgarian Rachel (eds.) Architecture and Landscape in Medieval Anatolia, 1100-1500
Edinburgh University Press, 2017. — 312 p.
Assesses and analyses medieval Anatolia from the perspectives of architecture, landscape and urban space.
Anatolia was home to a large number of polities in the medieval period. Given its location at the geographical and chronological juncture between Byzantines and the Ottomans, its story tends to be read through the Seljuk experience. This obscures the multiple experiences and spaces of Anatolia under the Byzantine empire, Turko-Muslim dynasties contemporary to the Seljuks, the Mongol Ilkhanids, and the various beyliks of eastern and western Anatolia.
This book looks beyond political structures and towards a reconsideration of the interactions between the rural and the urban; an analysis of the relationships between architecture, culture and power; and an examination of the region’s multiple geographies. In order to expand historiographical perspectives it draws on a wide variety of sources (architectural, artistic, documentary and literary), including texts composed in several languages (Arabic, Armenian, Byzantine Greek, Persian and Turkish).
Original in its coverage of this period from the perspective of multiple polities, religions and languages, this volume is also the first to truly embrace the cultural complexity that was inherent in the reality of daily life in medieval Anatolia and surrounding regions.
- Includies of architecture, urban space and landscape in medieval Anatolia
- Reflects current trends in scholarship on this complex frontier zone, showing the fluid frontier character of the region to be crucial for its building fabric
- Explores themes such as the persistence of Christian settlements and communities, the impact of Mongol invasion, the role of Sufi communities, and the definition of landscapes in texts
- Shows how spaces and places were created and understood
Patricia Blessing is Assistant Professor of Art History at Pomona College. She completed her PhD in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University in 2012 and is the author of Rebuilding Anatolia after the Mongol Conquest: Islamic Architecture in the Lands of Rūm, 1240-1330 ( 2014).
Rachel Goshgarian is Assistant Professor of History at Lafayette College. She is co-author of the first Armenian grammar published in Turkey in over 100 years, Kendi Kendine Ermenice, with Sukru Ilicak (2006).
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