Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Introduction générale et remercients par
- General introduction and acknowledgements
- Introduction (français)
- Introduction (English)
- Image de la mer dans les sociétés médievales: perceptions et modes de transmission
- La perception de la mer en Europe du nord-ouest (MoyenÂge, XIIIe–XVe siècle)
- Medieval maritime polities–some considerations
- ‘Piracy’, connectivity and seaborne power in the Middle Ages
- Connectivity and sea power–entangled maritime dimensions in the medieval Mediterranean
- La révolution nautique médiévale (XIIIe–XVe siècles)
- The maritime war in the Mediterranean, 13th–15th centuries
- La carte marine au Moyen Âge : outil technique, objet symbolique
- Shipbuilding in the medieval Adriatic
- L'Arsenal de Venise
- Flottes publiques, flottes privées à Venise (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- Au coeur de la puissance maritime de Venise, le sel
- «Quod vita et salus nostra est quod galee nostre navigent» – les gens de mer a Venise du XIIIe au XVe siecle
- The naval power of Venice in the eastern Mediterranean in the Middle Ages
- La vie maritime de Split et de Zadar du XIIIe au XVe siècle
- Dubrovnik et la mer (XIIIe–XVe siècle)
- Les génois. Une flotte militaire privée?
- Flottes publiques et flottes privées à Gênes au XIVe siècle
- Les flottes génoises dans l'Atlantique (Angleterre–Flandre), XIIe–XVe siècles
- La vie a bord : de la navigation de cabotage à la navigation hauturière (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- Les Normands d'Italie et la mer (XIe–XIIe siècle)
- La mer empoisonnée : la Sicile mediévale
- Les Omeyyades d'al-Andalus (711-1021) : une puissance navale de la Méditerranée médiévale?
- Les flottes catalanes, XIIe–XVe siècles
- Catalan maritime expansion in the western Mediterranean (12th–15th centuries)
- Shipbuilding in Portugal in the Middle Ages
- Manuel Pessanha et l'organisation de la flotte portugaise au XIVe siècle
- Les ordres militaires et la mer (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- The Latin kingdom of Jerusalem and the sea (late 11th–13th century)
- The ships of the Knights of St John
- The Lusignan Kingdom of Cyprus and the sea, 13th–15th centuries
- At the centre of the sea routes: maritime life in Crete between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern era
- The Dromōn and the Byzantine navy
- Harbours and shipbuilding in Byzantine Constantinople
- The Byzantine and Greek merchant maritime enterprises in the medieval Mediterranean
- The Byzantine economy and the sea: the maritime trade of Byzantium, 10th–15th centuries
- The maritime trade in the medieval Black Sea
- Venetian navigation to the Black Sea areas, 13th–15th centuries
- The transfer of maritime technology from southern Europe to England c. 1100–c. 1600
- Les royaumes barbares et la mer (Ve–début VIeIIe siècle)
- Capetiens et Plantagenets à l'épreuve de la suprématie maritime
- Les fondements du commerce maritime de La Rochelle au MoyenÂge
- La Bourgogne et la mer à la fin du MoyenÂge
- Les anciens Frisons et la mer (premier millénaire après Jésus Christ)
- The Viking ships
- The Vikings and their age – a good deal more than plunder
- The maritime law of the Baltic Sea
- Did the activity of the ‘Vitalian Brethren’ prevent trade in the Baltic area?
- The Teutonic Order and the Baltic Sea in the 13th–16th centuries
- Ships and shipping in medieval England
- Port labor in medieval England
- Fishing in medieval England
- Portuguese maritime expansion from the African coast to India
- Les réseaux commerciaux baynounk en Sénégambie (Afrique de l'ouest), du VIIIe au XVIIe siècle
- Le Mali et la mer (XIVe siècle) : autour du récit du sultan Mûsâ sur l'expédition maritime de son prédécesseur Muhammad
- L'Afrique orientale et la mer du Ier au XVe siècle
- The Red Sea in the medieval period
- Early Maya navigation and maritime connections in Mesoamerica
- The Maya Caribbean: fishing, navigation, and trade
- The central Andean peoples and their relationship to the sea
- Fluidité des circulations dans l'empire mongol du XIIIe siècle
- Les flottes islamiques de l'océan Indien (VIIe–XVe siècles) : une puissance navale au service du commerce
- Shipbuilding in India up to the 15th century
- Medieval ports in India
- Maritime relations between the Indian Ocean and the China Sea in the Middle Ages
- The naval power of the Yuan dynasty
- The Chinese fleets in the Indian Ocean (13th–15th centuries)
- Chinese supremacy in the Indian Ocean in the early 15th century
- La Corée et la mer, Xe–XVe siècles
- Féodalites maritimes : le Japon médieval et la mer (XIe–XVIe siècles)
- L'Insulinde et la mer avant l'arrivée des Occidentaux
- Boat building tradition in the Philippines (10th–16th centuries)
- Les relations maritimes entre l'Indonésie et l'Océan Indien au MoyenÂge
- Conclusion (français)
- Conclusion (English)
- Conclusion générale par
- General conclusion by
- COMPRENDRE LE RÔLE DE LA MER DANS L'HISTOIRE POUR ÉCLAIRER NOTRE AVENIR
- UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE THE SEA HAS PLAYED IN OUR PAST IN ORDER TO SHED LIGHT ON OUR FUTURE!
At the centre of the sea routes: maritime life in Crete between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern era
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Introduction générale et remercients par
- General introduction and acknowledgements
- Introduction (français)
- Introduction (English)
- Image de la mer dans les sociétés médievales: perceptions et modes de transmission
- La perception de la mer en Europe du nord-ouest (MoyenÂge, XIIIe–XVe siècle)
- Medieval maritime polities–some considerations
- ‘Piracy’, connectivity and seaborne power in the Middle Ages
- Connectivity and sea power–entangled maritime dimensions in the medieval Mediterranean
- La révolution nautique médiévale (XIIIe–XVe siècles)
- The maritime war in the Mediterranean, 13th–15th centuries
- La carte marine au Moyen Âge : outil technique, objet symbolique
- Shipbuilding in the medieval Adriatic
- L'Arsenal de Venise
- Flottes publiques, flottes privées à Venise (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- Au coeur de la puissance maritime de Venise, le sel
- «Quod vita et salus nostra est quod galee nostre navigent» – les gens de mer a Venise du XIIIe au XVe siecle
- The naval power of Venice in the eastern Mediterranean in the Middle Ages
- La vie maritime de Split et de Zadar du XIIIe au XVe siècle
- Dubrovnik et la mer (XIIIe–XVe siècle)
- Les génois. Une flotte militaire privée?
- Flottes publiques et flottes privées à Gênes au XIVe siècle
- Les flottes génoises dans l'Atlantique (Angleterre–Flandre), XIIe–XVe siècles
- La vie a bord : de la navigation de cabotage à la navigation hauturière (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- Les Normands d'Italie et la mer (XIe–XIIe siècle)
- La mer empoisonnée : la Sicile mediévale
- Les Omeyyades d'al-Andalus (711-1021) : une puissance navale de la Méditerranée médiévale?
- Les flottes catalanes, XIIe–XVe siècles
- Catalan maritime expansion in the western Mediterranean (12th–15th centuries)
- Shipbuilding in Portugal in the Middle Ages
- Manuel Pessanha et l'organisation de la flotte portugaise au XIVe siècle
- Les ordres militaires et la mer (XIIe–XVe siècles)
- The Latin kingdom of Jerusalem and the sea (late 11th–13th century)
- The ships of the Knights of St John
- The Lusignan Kingdom of Cyprus and the sea, 13th–15th centuries
- At the centre of the sea routes: maritime life in Crete between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern era
- The Dromōn and the Byzantine navy
- Harbours and shipbuilding in Byzantine Constantinople
- The Byzantine and Greek merchant maritime enterprises in the medieval Mediterranean
- The Byzantine economy and the sea: the maritime trade of Byzantium, 10th–15th centuries
- The maritime trade in the medieval Black Sea
- Venetian navigation to the Black Sea areas, 13th–15th centuries
- The transfer of maritime technology from southern Europe to England c. 1100–c. 1600
- Les royaumes barbares et la mer (Ve–début VIeIIe siècle)
- Capetiens et Plantagenets à l'épreuve de la suprématie maritime
- Les fondements du commerce maritime de La Rochelle au MoyenÂge
- La Bourgogne et la mer à la fin du MoyenÂge
- Les anciens Frisons et la mer (premier millénaire après Jésus Christ)
- The Viking ships
- The Vikings and their age – a good deal more than plunder
- The maritime law of the Baltic Sea
- Did the activity of the ‘Vitalian Brethren’ prevent trade in the Baltic area?
- The Teutonic Order and the Baltic Sea in the 13th–16th centuries
- Ships and shipping in medieval England
- Port labor in medieval England
- Fishing in medieval England
- Portuguese maritime expansion from the African coast to India
- Les réseaux commerciaux baynounk en Sénégambie (Afrique de l'ouest), du VIIIe au XVIIe siècle
- Le Mali et la mer (XIVe siècle) : autour du récit du sultan Mûsâ sur l'expédition maritime de son prédécesseur Muhammad
- L'Afrique orientale et la mer du Ier au XVe siècle
- The Red Sea in the medieval period
- Early Maya navigation and maritime connections in Mesoamerica
- The Maya Caribbean: fishing, navigation, and trade
- The central Andean peoples and their relationship to the sea
- Fluidité des circulations dans l'empire mongol du XIIIe siècle
- Les flottes islamiques de l'océan Indien (VIIe–XVe siècles) : une puissance navale au service du commerce
- Shipbuilding in India up to the 15th century
- Medieval ports in India
- Maritime relations between the Indian Ocean and the China Sea in the Middle Ages
- The naval power of the Yuan dynasty
- The Chinese fleets in the Indian Ocean (13th–15th centuries)
- Chinese supremacy in the Indian Ocean in the early 15th century
- La Corée et la mer, Xe–XVe siècles
- Féodalites maritimes : le Japon médieval et la mer (XIe–XVIe siècles)
- L'Insulinde et la mer avant l'arrivée des Occidentaux
- Boat building tradition in the Philippines (10th–16th centuries)
- Les relations maritimes entre l'Indonésie et l'Océan Indien au MoyenÂge
- Conclusion (français)
- Conclusion (English)
- Conclusion générale par
- General conclusion by
- COMPRENDRE LE RÔLE DE LA MER DANS L'HISTOIRE POUR ÉCLAIRER NOTRE AVENIR
- UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE THE SEA HAS PLAYED IN OUR PAST IN ORDER TO SHED LIGHT ON OUR FUTURE!
Summary
ABSTRACT. The author shows the positive consequences of the island's position in the center of the Mediterranean: it was a stopover on maritime routes and a transit center stimulated by the economic activity of the Venetian metropolis. The ports of Candie, La Canée, and Rethymnon were fortified by the Venetians who built arsenals and warehouses and established a specialized administration to control the ports and their activities, and who requested galleys from Crete for the Serenissima'sfleet. The island was central to a vast commercial network, and exported artisanal and agricultural products (wheat, wine, and cheeses).
RÉSUMÉ. L'auteur montre les conséquences positives de la situation de l'île au centre de la Méditerranée : une étape sur les routes maritimes, un centre de transit stimulé par l'activité économique de la métropole vénitienne. Les ports de Candie, La Canée, Rethymnon sont fortifiés par les Vénitiens qui édifient des arsenaux, des entrepôts, établissent une administration spécialisée pour le contrôle des ports et de leurs activités et demandent à la Crète de fournir des galères à la flotte de la Sérénissime. L'île est au coeur d'un vaste réseau commercial et exporte produits agricoles (blé, vin, fromage) et artisanaux.
Crete's position at Europe's south-eastern edge and between three continents (Europe, Asia and Africa) made the island one of the main transit points in the movement of people, goods and ideas of the Eastern Mediterranean basin. In terms of its geomorphology, although its northern coast is extremely fragmented, with peninsulas divided by broad, deep bays, this produces only a limited number of sheltered harbours. This deficiency is compensated for by the use of small anchorages, which continue to play a significant roleto the present day, and primarily by the construction of artificial harbours to serve the island's main cities.
The history of the island is interwoven with that of Venice, given that Crete was one of the Stato da Mar's most important territories from the early 13th century until 1669, when it was conquered by the Ottomans. Its favourable geographical position and fertile hinterland, coupled with the economic needs of Venice, led to the gradual development of the island.
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- The Sea in History - The Medieval World , pp. 382 - 400Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017
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