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Notes on the Contributors

In: The Power of the Dispersed
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Notes on the Contributors

Edoardo Angione

holds a PhD from the Department of Human Studies at the University of Roma Tre, Italy. His forthcoming thesis and book The Papacy and the Ottoman Empire: political, diplomatic and cultural aspects in the early 17th century is an enquiry on international and interreligious politics in the early modern Mediterranean and in the global context, he has published already several articles on that subject.

Iordan Avramov

is a researcher at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and historian interested in early modern intellectual communication. His research has been focused on the early Royal Society of London and figures like Henry Oldenburg and Robert Boyle. He has co-authored (with Michael Hunter and Hideyuki Yoshimoto) Boyle’s Books: The Evidence of his Citations (London: 2010) and is currently working on the role of the communicator in early modern science.

Marloes Cornelissen

is a historian and currently works as an instructor of Social and Political Science courses with a focus on Humanity and Society at Sabanci University in Istanbul, Turkey, where she earned her PhD and is a member of the Foundation Development Directorate. Previously she has worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the Leiden Institute for Area Studies at Leiden University. Her areas of expertise are early modern history of the Ottoman Empire, cultural history, consumption culture, and material culture. Her research interests currently focus on the material culture of diplomacy.

David Do Paço

is currently a István Deák visiting Professor in East Central European Studies at Columbia University’s History Department and Harriman Institute. He earned his Ph.D. in 2012 from the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and he has been a Max Weber Fellow at the EUI, a Core fellow at CEU-IAS, and an assistant professor in 18th-century history at Sciences Po. His book L’Orient à Vienne au dix-huitième siècle (Oxford, 2015) developed a critical approach to the trade diaspora studies. He is now exploring the social history of Muslims in early modern Europe and he has recently contributed to several peer-review journals.

José Luis Egío

is member of the research project The School of Salamanca (Academy of Sciences Mainz, MPI, Goethe University). He has published monographs and articles on the history of philosophy, law and theology in early modern Spain, France and Mexico. Together with Thomas Duve and Christiane Birr, he has recently edited the book The School of Salamanca: A Case of Global Knowledge Production (Brill: 2021).

Paula Manstetten

is a post-doctoral researcher in Early Modern History at Bamberg University, Germany. Her research focuses on Arab Christians in early modern Europe, pre-modern Arabic historiography and biography, and Islamic education. She studied Arabic and Islamic studies and literature in Münster, Berlin, Damascus, and London and completed her PhD on Ibn ʿAsākir’s twelfth-century History of Damascus at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London, in 2018.

Maria-Tsampika Lampitsi

holds a MSc in Global History from the London School of Economics, London, and a Mphil in Modern European History, University of Cambridge. She is currently PhD candidate at the University of Cyprus with the thesis Sentiments and moral identity in the correspondence of the Greek merchants of the Enlightenment.

Simon Mills

was awarded his PhD from Queen Mary, University of London in 2009, and is currently Lecturer in Early Modern History at Newcastle University. He has held fellowships at the Council for British Research in the Levant, Amman; the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (CRASSH), University of Cambridge; and the Dahlem Humanities Centre, Freie Universität Berlin. Between 2014 and 2017, he was a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Kent. His recent research on the Levant Company’s chaplains in the Eastern Mediterranean and the early modern Republic of Letters culminated in the 2020 Oxford UP monograph A Commerce of Knowledge: Trade, Religion, and Scholarship between England and the Ottoman Empire, c.1600–1760.

David Nelson

received a B.A. from Utah State in 2000 and the PhD from Indiana University in 2007. He is Associate Professor in the History Department at California Lutheran University, teaching Asian History and Modern European History. His area of expertise is sixteenth and seventeenth century Japanese history, with research interest in crime and punishment as well as honor culture.

Adolfo Polo y La Borda

is assistant professor in the Department of History and Geography at the Universidad de los Andes, Colombia. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany. He got his PhD (2017) at the University of Maryland – College Park, USA. His research focuses on the political culture of the Spanish Empire, with a particular interest in early modern globalization, imperial mobility, and the ideas and practices of cosmopolitanism. He is finishing a book on the worldwide movement of seventeenth-century Spanish imperial officials.

Ana M. Rodríguez-Rodríguez

received in 2007 a PhD in Spanish Literature from Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, in 2021 a second PhD from the University Complutense of Madrid with a critical edition of Antonio de Salamanca’s Libro de casos impensados. Since 2014, she is Associate Professor of Spanish Literature and Culture at the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Iowa. Next to her first book, Letras liberadas. Cautiverio, escritura y subjetividad en el Mediterráneo de la época imperial española (Liberated Letters. Captivity, Writing and Subjectivity in the Mediterranean during the Spanish Empire), Madrid: Visor, 2013, she has edited several volumes and edited many articles in that field of research.

Cesare Santus

holds a PhD from the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris, and is currently FNRS Postdoctoral Researcher at the Université Catholique de Louvain. In his book Trasgressioni necessarie. Communicatio in sacris, coesistenza e conflitti tra le comunità cristiane orientali (Rome: 2019) he studied the confessional dynamics within the Greek and Armenian communities of the Ottoman Empire, and their reaction to Catholic apostolate in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He is the author of several articles on the Muslim and Eastern Christian presence in early modern Italy, and has recently published a second book, Il “turco” a Livorno: Incontri con l’islam nella Toscana del Seicento (Milan: 2019). He is actually pursuing an on-going research on the role of the Roman Inquisition in examining the problems raised by the establishment of the Eastern Catholic Churches and more broadly by European missionary activity in the East.

Stefano Saracino

holds a PhD 2011 in Political Sciences, defended at the Ludwig-Maximilians- Universität Munich and published unter the title Tyrannis und Tyrannenmord bei Machiavelli: zur Genese einer antitraditionellen Auffassung politischer Gewalt, politischer Ordnung und Herrschaftsmoral (2012). After Postdoc Fellowships at the University of Frankfurt and research positions at the FSU Jena, he is currently employed in the SFB 1015 Muße, University of Freiburg. He has published widely and has edited several volume(s) on the history of Machiavelli(sm) and statehood. His current research focuses on the history of Greek orthodox almseeking in the Holy Roman Empire.

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The Power of the Dispersed

Early Modern Global Travelers beyond Integration

Series:  Intersections, Volume: 77
Cover The Power of the Dispersed
E-Book ISBN:
9789004140721
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
13 Dec 2021
  • Subjects
    • History
      • Early Modern History
      • Global History
      • Migration History
Front Matter
Preliminary material
Copyright page
Acknowledgements
Illustrations
Note on the Editor
Notes on the Contributors
Introduction
Part 1 Dispersed in Ecclesiastical and Diplomatic Networks
Chapter 1 In Parte d’Infedeli: A Papal Informant in Istanbul (1607–1608)
Chapter 2 The Album Amicorum of the Athonite Monk Theoklitos Polyeidis and the Agency of Perambulating Greek Alms Collectors in the Holy Roman Empire (18th Century)
Chapter 3 The Great Imposture: Eastern Christian Rogues and Counterfeiters in Rome, c. 17th–19th Centuries
Part 2 Dispersed in the Republic of Letters
Chapter 4 Nomads in the Early Modern Republic of Letters: The Transient Correspondents of Henry Oldenburg and the Early Royal Society of London
Chapter 5 Travelling Scholastics: The Emergence of an Empirical Normative Authority in Early Modern Spanish America
Chapter 6 Johann Heinrich Callenberg’s Orient
Chapter 7 Solomon Negri: The Self-Fashioning of an Arab Christian in Early Modern Europe
Part 3 Dispersed by War
Chapter 8 From Erstwhile Captive to Cultural Erudite: The Career of Korean-Born Samurai, Wakita Kyūbei
Chapter 9 Stories of Spanish Captivity in Istanbul: From Trauma to Empowerment
Chapter 10 Between America and the Maghrib: The Marquis of Varinas and the Weapons of the Exile
Part 4 Dispersed in Commercial and Political Networks
Chapter 11 In the Blind Spot of the State: Trieste in the 18th-Century Trans-Imperial Adriatic Society
Chapter 12 Religious Feeling and the Construction of a Merchant’s Identity in the Greek Trade Networks of the Late Eighteenth Century
Chapter 13 From Bern with Love: The Spy with a Taste for the Exquisite in Early Modern Istanbul
Chapter 14 Dispersed Things: European Merchant Households in the Levant
Back Matter
Index Rerum
Index Locorum
Index Nominum

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