Cross And Crescent Meet In The Medieval Mediterranean
This story lights on all shores of the Mediterranean and provides a cogent reminder of a shared history
The sea of faith is the Mediterranean in the millennium that we, in the west, call the Middle Ages. In that long and misunderstood era, the lands round what the Romans once called 'mare nostrum' - our sea - witnessed an unceasing struggle between Christianity and Islam, two siblings sprung from the same source, over who would inherit the legacy of antiquity. The collision of the two, however different its manifestations, came to fashion a wholly novel Mediterranean and, in so doing, a new world.
In this magnificent book Stephen O'Shea evokes the epochal moments of this encounter between the two imperial faiths, bringing to life the instances of conflict and coexistence that were at once the marvel and the talk of an entire world. His story lights on all shores of the Mediterranean and provides a cogent reminder of a shared history.
The fall of the Christian Middle East at Yarmuck, Martel's 'wall of ice' at Poitiers, Byzantium's route at Manzikert, all the way through to Saladin at Jerusalem, Lazar at Kosovo and the suicidal defence of Malta against the Ottomons - these and other fragments of our collective memory come alive and together as part of a huge canvas in this fresh, narrative history. For all those who care about the present day, and the continuing coexistence of these to cultures, history has never been so timely.