Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II

This is the second part of a larger study seeking to contribute to a better understanding of the sustained process of religious, socio-political and cultural contact between Greek and Romanian ethnic groups in the early modern period. The two sections published here bring forward and discuss little-...

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Main Author: Nikos Panou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Neohellenic Research 2008-11-01
Series:Historical Review
Online Access:https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3991
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spelling doaj-3baa70abe1e74715b30df5572b6d264e2020-11-25T01:08:27ZengInstitute for Neohellenic Research Historical Review1790-35721791-76032008-11-01405910410.12681/hr.2093341Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - IINikos Panou0Harvard UniversityThis is the second part of a larger study seeking to contribute to a better understanding of the sustained process of religious, socio-political and cultural contact between Greek and Romanian ethnic groups in the early modern period. The two sections published here bring forward and discuss little-known and yet important evidence covering the first two post-Byzantine centuries and are intended to elaborate, supplement or contextualise the materials presented in the first part (which appeared in the previous volume of this journal). Not accidentally, this article ends with an unavoidable reference to the very text that ignited our exploration into the historical landscape of the pre-modern Balkans, a short but striking passage from Matthew of Myra's early seventeenth-century chronicle known as History of Wallachia. Indeed, Matthew's testimony stands out as one of the first conscious attempts to account for the uneasy, but also prolific, dynamic and multi-layered, relationship between the two peoples. It has been the aim of this paper to illustrate the basic patterns of that intricate, as much as intriguing, relationship as it was being shaped in the aftermath of the Byzantine Commonwealth's absorption into the challenging world of the Ottoman Turks.https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3991
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nikos Panou
spellingShingle Nikos Panou
Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
Historical Review
author_facet Nikos Panou
author_sort Nikos Panou
title Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
title_short Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
title_full Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
title_fullStr Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
title_full_unstemmed Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History, Mentalities, Institutions - II
title_sort greek-romanian symbiotic patterns in the early modern period: history, mentalities, institutions - ii
publisher Institute for Neohellenic Research
series Historical Review
issn 1790-3572
1791-7603
publishDate 2008-11-01
description This is the second part of a larger study seeking to contribute to a better understanding of the sustained process of religious, socio-political and cultural contact between Greek and Romanian ethnic groups in the early modern period. The two sections published here bring forward and discuss little-known and yet important evidence covering the first two post-Byzantine centuries and are intended to elaborate, supplement or contextualise the materials presented in the first part (which appeared in the previous volume of this journal). Not accidentally, this article ends with an unavoidable reference to the very text that ignited our exploration into the historical landscape of the pre-modern Balkans, a short but striking passage from Matthew of Myra's early seventeenth-century chronicle known as History of Wallachia. Indeed, Matthew's testimony stands out as one of the first conscious attempts to account for the uneasy, but also prolific, dynamic and multi-layered, relationship between the two peoples. It has been the aim of this paper to illustrate the basic patterns of that intricate, as much as intriguing, relationship as it was being shaped in the aftermath of the Byzantine Commonwealth's absorption into the challenging world of the Ottoman Turks.
url https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3991
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