CEU eTD Collection (2016); Kiss, Tamás: Cyprus in Venetian and Ottoman Political Imagination, c. 1489-1582

CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2016
Author Kiss, Tamás
Title Cyprus in Venetian and Ottoman Political Imagination, c. 1489-1582
Summary In this dissertation I draw on a variety of Venetian and Ottoman visual, architectural, narrative and poetic sources to shed light on how groups and individuals in these two imperial polities imagined the political significance of conquering and possessing Cyprus. The period under scrutiny is between the island’s Venetian annexation in 1489 and the aftermath of its Ottoman conquest in 1571. In investigating the ways in which different Venetian and Ottoman actors attached historical, mythological, political and eschatological connotations to Cyprus or exploited the already existing ones for their political ends, I pick apart various early modern discursive threads about the Venetian and Ottoman occupations of Cyprus, and then study how they were entangled within and across religious and political boundaries in the early modern Mediterranean and beyond. The result is the only cultural study of how the two major sixteenth-century Mediterranean empires contested the island and what it meant for their respective imperial projects.
Supervisor Krstić, Tijana; Szőnyi, György Endre
Department Medieval Studies PhD
Full texthttps://www.etd.ceu.edu/2016/kiss_tamas.pdf

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