Contents
List of figures and maps
List of abbreviations
Notes on contributors
Maps
Preface
1 Introduction
Norman Housley
Conquerors and conquered
2 Crusading in the fifteenth century and its relation to the development of Ottoman dynastic legitimacy, self-image, and the Ottoman consolidation of authority
Nikolay Antov
3 Byzantine refugees as crusade propagandists: the travels of Nicholas Agallon
Jonathan Harris
The crusading response: expressions, dynamics and constraints
4 Dances, dragons and a pagan queen: Sigismund of Luxemburg and the publicizing of the Ottoman Turkish threat
Mark Whelan
5 Alfonso V and the anti-Turkish crusade
Mark Aloisio
6 Papal legates and crusading activity in central Europe: the Hussites and the Ottoman Turks
Antonin Kalous
7 Switching the tracks: Baltic crusades against Russia in the fifteenth century
Anti Selart
Diplomatic and cultural interactions
8 Tīmūr and the ‘Frankish’ powers
Michele Bernardini
9 Venetian attempts at forging an alliance with Persia and the crusade in the fifteenth and early-sixteenth centuries
Giorgio Rota
10 Quattrocento Genoa and the legacies of crusading
Steven Epstein
Frontier zones: the Balkans and the Adriatic
11 The key to the gate of Christendom? The strategic importance of Bosnia in the struggle against the Ottomans
Emir Filippović
12 Between two worlds or a world of its own? The eastern Adriatic in the fifteenth century
Oliver Jens Schmitt
13 The Romanian concept of crusade in the fifteenth century
Sergiu Iosipescu
14 Conclusion: transformations of crusading in the long fifteenth century
Alan V. Murray
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Norman Housley is Professor of History at the University of Leicester, UK.