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Agents of Empire: Knights, Corsairs, Jesuits, and Spies in the Sixteenth-Century Mediterranean World

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Intrigue and power in sixteenth-century Mediterranean.

"Agents of Empire" offers a fascinating journey into the complex web of alliances and espionage that defined Mediterranean geopolitics in the 1500s. If you're a history buff looking to get lost in the tales of knights, corsairs, Jesuits, and spies—all key players in shaping the era's imperial strategies—this is your kind of read. Malcolm's meticulous research and engaging prose bring pivotal figures and events to life, making the distant past feel immediate and thrilling.

Sale

Agents of Empire: Knights, Corsairs, Jesuits, and Spies in the Sixteenth-Century Mediterranean World

Regular price $11.90 $10.90 8% off
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780190262785
Authors: Noel Malcolm
Date of Publication: 2015-09-03
Format: Hardcover
Goodreads rating: 4.09
(rated by 359 readers)

Description

In the late sixteenth century, a prominent Albanian named Antonio Bruni composed a revealing document about his home country. Historian Sir Noel Malcolm takes this document as a point of departure to explore the lives of the entire Bruni family, whose members included an archbishop of the Balkans, the captain of the papal flagship at the Battle of Lepanto--at which the Ottomans were turned back in the Eastern Mediterranean--in 1571, and a highly placed interpreter in Istanbul, formerly Constantinople, the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire that fell to the Turks in 1453. The taking of Constantinople had profoundly altered the map of the Mediterranean. By the time of Bruni's document, Albania, largely a Venetian province from 1405 onward, had been absorbed into the Ottoman Empire. Even under the Ottomans, however, this was a world marked by the ferment of the Italian Renaissance. In Agents of Empire, Malcolm uses the collective biography of the Brunis to paint a fascinating and intimate picture of Albania at a moment when it represented the frontier between empires, cultures, and religions. The lives of the polylingual, cosmopolitan Brunis shed new light on the interrelations between the Ottoman and Christian worlds, characterized by both conflict and complex interdependence. The result of years of archival detective
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Intrigue and power in sixteenth-century Mediterranean.

"Agents of Empire" offers a fascinating journey into the complex web of alliances and espionage that defined Mediterranean geopolitics in the 1500s. If you're a history buff looking to get lost in the tales of knights, corsairs, Jesuits, and spies—all key players in shaping the era's imperial strategies—this is your kind of read. Malcolm's meticulous research and engaging prose bring pivotal figures and events to life, making the distant past feel immediate and thrilling.