During the later middle ages, the Crown of Aragon included a number of polities, among which the two major islands of the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Sicily. Despite being components of the same union, those two realms were at the antipodes, with the latter being endowed with huge autonomy and the former treated as a colony. Through adopting a comparative approach, this talk examines to what extent the Aragonese rulership changed in Sardinia and Sicily and why it adjusted to their various political and social contexts, finally discussing how that different governmental approach reflected in the development of their bureaucratic apparatuses.Peer reviewe
The kingdoms of Mallorca and Trinacria (an artificial name given in 1302 to insular Sicily to distin...
39 Settimana di Studi dell’Istituto Internazional di Storia Economica “Francesco Datini” di Prato, F...
Il saggio analizza comprativamente il cambiamento del modello di monarchia nei regni di Sicilia citr...
The recent publication of two volumes of the acts of the Sardinian Parliament, edited by Laura Galop...
In 1412 Sicily lost its independence and became part of the Crown of Aragon. To rule the island, the...
In 1412 Sicily lost its independence and become permanently part of the Crown of Aragon. To rule the...
Introduction: At the end of the thirteenth century the battle for commercial and political predomina...
Starting in the 1340s, the Crown of Aragon strengthened its position in the Western Mediterranean b...
The expansion of the post-carolingian core in the Mediterranean area (Spain, Southern Italy, Sicily ...
he purpose of this study is the identification and reconstruction of the common thread linking the t...
From the late medieval period the Crown of Aragon was at the forefront of archival innovation. Culmi...
Abstract This article attempts to explain the dichotomy which the author has observed in the Middle...
The age of King James II of Aragon (1291-1327) marked a turning point for the history of the Crown o...
Sardinia (Italy) and Corsica (France) are two islands divided by a strait that is 13 km wide. Their ...
The age of King James II of Aragon (1291-1327) marked a turning point for the history of the Crown o...
The kingdoms of Mallorca and Trinacria (an artificial name given in 1302 to insular Sicily to distin...
39 Settimana di Studi dell’Istituto Internazional di Storia Economica “Francesco Datini” di Prato, F...
Il saggio analizza comprativamente il cambiamento del modello di monarchia nei regni di Sicilia citr...
The recent publication of two volumes of the acts of the Sardinian Parliament, edited by Laura Galop...
In 1412 Sicily lost its independence and became part of the Crown of Aragon. To rule the island, the...
In 1412 Sicily lost its independence and become permanently part of the Crown of Aragon. To rule the...
Introduction: At the end of the thirteenth century the battle for commercial and political predomina...
Starting in the 1340s, the Crown of Aragon strengthened its position in the Western Mediterranean b...
The expansion of the post-carolingian core in the Mediterranean area (Spain, Southern Italy, Sicily ...
he purpose of this study is the identification and reconstruction of the common thread linking the t...
From the late medieval period the Crown of Aragon was at the forefront of archival innovation. Culmi...
Abstract This article attempts to explain the dichotomy which the author has observed in the Middle...
The age of King James II of Aragon (1291-1327) marked a turning point for the history of the Crown o...
Sardinia (Italy) and Corsica (France) are two islands divided by a strait that is 13 km wide. Their ...
The age of King James II of Aragon (1291-1327) marked a turning point for the history of the Crown o...
The kingdoms of Mallorca and Trinacria (an artificial name given in 1302 to insular Sicily to distin...
39 Settimana di Studi dell’Istituto Internazional di Storia Economica “Francesco Datini” di Prato, F...
Il saggio analizza comprativamente il cambiamento del modello di monarchia nei regni di Sicilia citr...