Lexington Books
Pages: 280
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-0-7391-0512-2 • Hardback • August 2003 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-1484-1 • Paperback • December 2005 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-5797-8 • eBook • August 2003 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Julie Taylor is an assistant professor at the University of Michigan at Dearborn.
Chapter 1 Muslims in Italy Prior to the Thirteenth Century
Chapter 2 The Creation of a Muslim Colony in Apulia
Chapter 3 Muslim Status, Religious Practice, and Culture
Chapter 4 The Administration of the Muslim Community
Chapter 5 Muslim Occupations
Chapter 6 Lucera Under Manfred
Chapter 7 Angevin Lucera
Chapter 8 The Fall of Muslim Lucera
Chapter 9 Conclusion
Taylor's contribution lies mainly in her analysis of the limited number of diplomatic sources that do exist. Her work represents the first detailed monography on the colony's origins, its inhabitants, and its destruction. As such, historians interested in this anomalous colony ought to be grateful to her.
— American Historical Review
Taylor makes creative and extensive use of chronicles, archives, coins, and various archaeological sources to reconstruct a history rich in detail. . . . Julie Taylor'sMuslims in Medieval Italy: The Colony at Lucera is a well-documented and original piece of work that constructs a cohesive narrative built on a large and diversified corpus of materials. . . . This work stands among those that provide a more nuanced understanding of the complexities that marked Muslim-Christian relations in southern Italy in the thirteenth century.
— William Granara, Harvard University; The Journal Of Religion
The establishment of the Muslim colony at Lucera was an extraordinary and innovative experiment, one of the most unusual of those attempted in the central middle ages as western Europeans tried to come to terms with the indigenous populations now passing under their control. In the first full-length scholarly study of Lucera, Julie Taylor follows the Muslims from their original home in central Sicily to the settlement founded for them on the mainland and traces the history of the colony until its suppression. This first-class study is a must for those interested in Sicily and southern Italy under the Hohenstaufen and Angevin rulers and in the relations between Christianity and Islam in the central middle ages...
— Jonathan Riley-Smith, The University of Cambridge
The establishment of the Muslim colony at Lucera was an extraordinary and innovative experiment, one of the most unusual ofthose attempted in the central middle ages as western Europeans tried to come to terms with the indigenous populations nowpassing under their control. In the first full-length scholarly study of Lucera, Julie Taylor follows the Muslims from their originalhome in central Sicily to the settlement founded for them on the mainland and traces the history of the colony until itssuppression. This first-class study is a must for those interested in Sicily and southern Italy under the Hohenstaufen and Angevin rulers and in the relations between Christianity and Islam in the central middle ages.
— Jonathan Riley-Smith, The University of Cambridge