Byzantine rule over Anatolia ended in the eleventh century, leaving the population and its Turkish rulers to build social and economic institutions throughout the region. The emerging Anatolian society comprised a highly heterogeneous population of Christians and Muslims whose literati produced legal documents in Arabic, literary texts in Persian, and some of the earliest written works in the Turkish language. Yet the cultural landscape that emerged as a result has received very little attention—until now. Investigating daily life in Anatolia during the fourteenth century, Foodways and Daily Life in Medieval Anatolia draws on a creative array of sources, including hagiographies, archaeological evidence, Sufi poetry, and endowment deeds, to ...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
Feasting is a generally a ritualized activity, and faunal and artistic evidence from Neolithic Çatal...
International audienceIn western Anatolia, the second half of the thirteenth century corresponds to ...
Byzantine rule over Anatolia ended in the eleventh century, leaving the population and its Turkish r...
Abstract - Food consumption patterns, in both ancient and modern cultures, are shaped by a variety ...
This is a pioneering study which analyzes the food cultures of medieval Cairenes on the basis of a l...
This contribution investigates Neolithic communities in Western Anatolia and the southern Balkans (6...
Unique in its cultural and religious makeup, medieval Iberia represented a crossroads of cultures. T...
Within the rapidly expanding area of research on food and foodways, the intention of the POMEDOR pro...
International audienceThis volume brings together archaeologists, archaeological scientists and hist...
Commensal feasting is a social practice that allows the constant negotiation and manipulation of soc...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
This manuscript describes the historical background of gastronomy and culinary culture from ancient ...
A 12th-13th-century A.D. ceramic assemblage from Alexander's Hill at Sagalassos in southwestern Turk...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
Feasting is a generally a ritualized activity, and faunal and artistic evidence from Neolithic Çatal...
International audienceIn western Anatolia, the second half of the thirteenth century corresponds to ...
Byzantine rule over Anatolia ended in the eleventh century, leaving the population and its Turkish r...
Abstract - Food consumption patterns, in both ancient and modern cultures, are shaped by a variety ...
This is a pioneering study which analyzes the food cultures of medieval Cairenes on the basis of a l...
This contribution investigates Neolithic communities in Western Anatolia and the southern Balkans (6...
Unique in its cultural and religious makeup, medieval Iberia represented a crossroads of cultures. T...
Within the rapidly expanding area of research on food and foodways, the intention of the POMEDOR pro...
International audienceThis volume brings together archaeologists, archaeological scientists and hist...
Commensal feasting is a social practice that allows the constant negotiation and manipulation of soc...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
This manuscript describes the historical background of gastronomy and culinary culture from ancient ...
A 12th-13th-century A.D. ceramic assemblage from Alexander's Hill at Sagalassos in southwestern Turk...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
Feasting is a generally a ritualized activity, and faunal and artistic evidence from Neolithic Çatal...
International audienceIn western Anatolia, the second half of the thirteenth century corresponds to ...