Venice and the Dalmatian Hinterland: Spalato, Poglizza, Almissa and Clissa (Late 15th – Early 16th Century) (Later Medieval Europe, 25)
$133.94
$157.58
ISBN 9789004713758
Book info: Venice and the Dalmatian Hinterland: Spalato, Poglizza, Almissa and Clissa (Late 15th – Early 16th Century) (Later Medieval Europe, 25) (Hardcover, 308 pages) – Brill, 2024. Language: English. This volume offers a source-based analysis of the complex interactions between the Venetian administration of the coastal town Spalato (Split)...
Book info: Venice and the Dalmatian Hinterland: Spalato, Poglizza, Almissa and Clissa (Late 15th – Early 16th Century) (Later Medieval Europe, 25) (Hardcover, 308 pages) – Brill, 2024. Language: English.
This volume offers a source-based analysis of the complex interactions between the Venetian administration of the coastal town Spalato (Split) and its hinterland under Venetian, Hungarian, and Ottoman rule. Employing a microhistorical approach, Sadovski studies the military importance, economic dynamics, and social changes in the Dalmatian hinterland in the later medieval period. This book also explores multilingualism, highlighting how Slavic languages as well as local laws and customs were integrated into the Venetian administration. In doing so, it broadens our understanding of the Venetian maritime empire and proposes a new way of thinking about hinterlands – in cultural, social, linguistic, and legal terms alongside economic and political aspects. Editorial Reviews Review "Lena Sadovski’s book is an important contribution to the knowledge of Venetian administration and everyday life in the area of present-day central Dalmatia / southern Croatia. Its value lies not only in the use of previously unused archival sources and the reinterpretation of known sources, but also in its methodological innovation, which can serve as a guide for future research into medieval Dalmatia and Croatia." – Neven Budak, in: The Medieval Review (2025), p. 10.37About the Author Lena Sadovski, Ph.D. (2023), University of Vienna, is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Habsburg and Balkan Studies of the Austrian Academy of Sciences working on the late medieval and early modern history of the Balkans, specifically Dalmatia and Bulgaria.