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Mestizos Identities at the Margins of Portuguese Imperial Expansion
Filhos da Terra narrates the history over time of the so-called ‘Portuguese communities’ living outside the boundaries of the Portuguese Empire but identified locally and by other European empires as ‘Portuguese’. Concepts such as ‘tribe’, ‘diaspora’, and ‘society of métissage’ have been widely used to define these groups.

In Filhos da Terra, António Manuel Hespanha sets the stage to analyse a process of creolization that followed the Portuguese maritime expansion and consequent colonial buildup after 1415 and until 1800. This translated edition of his work opens up the possibility for future critical scholarly and public comparative discussions about diversity, identities, and identifications in the context of European empire building.

Contributors are: Cátia Antunes, Zoltan Biedermann, Tamar Herzog, Noelle Richardson, Sophie Rose, and Ângela Barreto Xavier.
These last three books of Josephus’s Antiquities detail Jewish history between the establishment of direct Roman rule in Judea in 6 CE and the outbreak of the Judean rebellion against Rome in 66—a rebellion that culminated in 70 with the destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple. Along the way, these books also constitute the main source for the context in which Christianity was born. This volume offers a translation of Josephus’s Greek text, along with a commentary that aims to clarify the history to which Josephus testifies and also its meaning for him as an exiled Jerusalemite and rebel-turned-historian.
Art and the Aesthetics of the Incredible in Neronian Rome
Author:
Golden Excess: Art and the Aesthetics of the Incredible in Neronian Rome is the first monograph to offer a full art historical synthesis of the rich archaeological and monumental evidence for Nero’s remarkable principate. An outsized and innovative artistic program emerges, informed by aesthetics of excess, the grotesque and learned luxury, that rivals the cultural achievements of Rome’s first emperor, Augustus and stands in stark contrast to the universally negative and disparaging accounts of Nero in ancient authors. Indeed, Neronian Rome witnessed an astonishing efflorescence in the arts whose lasting effects still resonate.
Hustle and Bustle explores the movements, sites, sounds, and smells unique to port cities, and to the constant activity associated with the shipping and trade, migration, and transport that characterizes the spaces of port cities during day and night. Detailed case studies with a focus on European examples, from multidisciplinary perspectives, provide new approaches to reading port cities. The authors explore perspectives from planning to understand these unique conditions of port cities and their spatial, social and cultural conditions, and to inform new policies, plans, designs that acknowledge both the specific conditions of transshipment and associated nuisances of sound and smell, and of air and water pollution.

Contributors are: Vincent Baptist, Robert Bartłomiejski, Tianchen Dai, Carola Hein, Sławomir Iwasiów, Karolina Izdebska, Maciej Kowalewski, Urszula Kozłowska, Paul van de Laar, Beatrice Moretti, Nick Osbaldiston, Manuel Pacheco Coelho, Ewa Rewers, Dirk Schubert, Christoph Strupp, and Enrico Tommarchi.
Author:
The blank spots on a map and the legends that speak of terrae incognitae are among the most seductive sirens of the cartographic imagination. They hint at the existence of unknown lands, yet tell us nothing about what they are or what they might be like.
Do such lands even exist? How many types of terrae incognitae are there? What does it mean, and what has it meant, to mark a land as unknown? Why do so many maps of the last five centuries insist on reserving a place for unknown geographies?
This book navigates the cartographic unknown, exploring its contribution to the history of knowledge and geographical culture.
[Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn: A Translation of David Nicolle's Work on Saladin with Commentary]
Author:
Translator:
ولكون ديفيد نيكول، مُؤرِّخًا عسكريًّا إنكليزيًّا، له كِتاباتٌ ثِقَالُ الوَطْأَة في الغرب، تتَّسمُ بالموضوعيَّة إلى حدٍّ كبيرٍ، ويأتي في سَنَام أعْماله هذا الكِتاب الذي نحنُ في رِحابه نتجوَّلُ وعمَّا قريبٍ سنقطفُ من ثماره اليُنْع؛ إذ يتناوَلُ الجانِبَ القياديَّ والإستراتيجيَّ والصِّراعيَّ من مسيرة صلاح الدِّين على نحوٍ أَخَصَّ، ومن ثَمَّ وقع عليه اخْتِياري. فالمُؤلِّف يتَّخذُ موقفَ بينَ بينَ من صلاح الدِّين، مُتجنِّبًا التَّفريط والإفْراط: فلا هو بالمُؤيِّد القُحِّ، ولا هو بالمُتحامِل الإدِّ، وإنْ كان إلى الحِياد أقرب

Saladin lived at a time when the Islamic world was going through profound changes. Since the later 11th century, the Turkish ruling elites had dominated most of the Islamic Middle East. In military terms Arabs and Persians were being pushed aside, though they continued to dominate the religious, cultural and commercial elites. Meanwhile Kurds had only limited and localized importance, which makes the rise of a man of Kurdish origins like Saladin unusual.
An Essay on Forgers, Bureaucrats, and Philologists (18th-20th Centuries)
Author:
Preface: Forgery in Action
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
Abbreviations
Calendar Systems
Transliteration
About the cover

Introduction—Fakes: In It From the Outset
 1 Carlo Ginzburg’s Photo Finish
 2 Robert-Henri Bautier’s Passion
 3 What Two Out-And-Out Usurpers Look Like
 4 State Art and Statecraft

Part1 Apprehensions and Reprehensions: Looking for Imprints



Introduction to Part1

1 Symbolic Deaths, or Proscription
 1 El-ḥâc Ṣâliḥ from Bûrdur
 2 Ḥaḳḳı Efendi—Deactivating a Pasha
 3 An Inventory as an Example

2 Sharp Sight, or the Reserves of Perspicacity
 1 From Afar, or the Fleeting Glimpse of Meḥmed Fû’âd Efendi
 2 Seen from Closer Up—the Attentive Gaze
 3 Collocation Effects
 4 In Which Excellence Frequents Mediocrity
 5 Matter for Discernment
 6 Distinctive Characteristics

3 Conditioning What Cannot Be Discerned
 1 Clipped and Gilded
 2 Meḥmed the Kurd, or the Mutism of Scratching
 3 Sándor Radnóti, or the Power of Wear(ing)
 4 Süleymân Efendi, or Interpolation in the Hollows
 5 The Report from Bîġâ, or How to Falsify Without Altering
 6 Falsification despite the Indiscernible
 7 Vanishing Fakes
 8 The Garden of San Stefano

4 Extracts from the Realm of Particles
A Short Theory of Mixtures and Amalgamations
 1 Medicines, Fats, and Assimilated Products
 2 Trieste Rums, Leucadian Wines
 3 Water, Lemonade, and Carbonic Acid
 4 Rearranged and Recomposed
 5 Léon the Austrian and Co.
 6 Aniline and Its Admixtures
 7 The Color of Science: The Artifice of Chromatopsia
 8 Tea in the Laboratory
 9 All Sorts of Avania
 10 The Apothecary Dressed Up as a Chemist

Coda: The Power of Suspicion
 1 Gone AWOL

Part2 Characterization and Classification: The Morphology of Reports and Relationships



Introduction to Part2
 1 One Beginning, Two Trials

5 Forgers and Co.
Incrimination by the Gang
 1 Lads from the Docks (1)
 2 The Steamer from Trebizond
 3 Traces of Companionship
 4 Lads from the Docks (2)
 5 Vâsîlâkî, Sûrepa, Mıġırdîc, and the Gang

6 Confecting Is Conceiving
Conviction by Instruments
 1 The Idle-Handed
 2 Forever Tinkering, Forever Trying

7 The Work of Interrogation
 1 The Question
 2 Pressure
 3 To Summarize

Afterword: Making the Most of Fakes

Appendix 1: Facsimiles and Transliterations
Appendix 2: Analytical Table
Bibliography
Index of Operations
Index of Terms & Phrases
Three Generations of Chinese Trotskyists in Defeat, Jail, Exile, and Diaspora
Editors / Translators: and
With an introduction by Gregor Benton.

The Longest Night tells the story of Chinese Trotskyism in its later years, including after Mao Zedong's capture of Beijing in 1949. It treats the three ages of Chinese Trotskyism: the founding generation around Chen Duxiu, Zheng Chaolin, Wang Fanxi, and Peng Shuzhi, who joined the Opposition after their expulsion from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP); the first generation of those who (after 1931) did not first pass through the ranks of the CCP before becoming Trotskyists; and those who became Trotskyists after 1949, mainly in Hong Kong and the diaspora.
Spalato, Poglizza, Almissa and Clissa (Late 15th – Early 16th Century)
Author:
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.