Portraits of Empires

INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780253066923

Habsburg Albums from the German House in Ottoman Constantinople

Price:
Sale price$57.99
Stock:
Temporarily out of stock. Order now & we'll deliver when available

By Robyn Dora Radway
Imprint:
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
279 x 216 mm
Weight:
840 g
Pages:
296

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Robyn Dora Radway is Associate Professor of History at Central European University. She has published in Early Modern Low Countries; Austrian History Yearbook; Journal of Early Modern History; and Archivum Ottomanicum.

Acknowledgments Note on Translation and Transliteration List of Abbreviations Introduction 1. The German House in Constantinople 2. Making Albums in the German House 3. Ambassadors 4. Staff 5. Scholars 6. Noble Men Passing Through Afterword Appendix: Albums of the German House in Constantinople Bibliography Index

"The wealth of precise and new historical information in this study is truly impressive. Radway manages to concretize these albums for us, providing invaluable archival and historical information that helps us fully understand them."-Emine Fetvaci, author of The Album of the World Emperor: Cross-Cultural Collecting and the Art of Album Making in Seventeenth-Century Istanbul "With the Alba amicorum from the German house in Constantinople, Robyn Radway has discovered a treasure trove of historical material that offers stunning insights into not only the symbolic world of the Ottoman empire and its material culture of book making, but also the networking practices of German travellers. An incredibly rich book filled to the brim with marvellous illustrations."-Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger, Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin. "Robyn Dora Radway's book is an important contribution to the cultural history of Early Modern Europe. Brimming with erudtion, copiously illustrated, and engagingly written, it illuminates multiple aspects of a hitherto obscure but significant site, the Central European residence in Ottoman Istabul. Assembling a wide range of both visual and textual material, it demonstrates a wide range of inter- and intra-imperial interchanges that existed but have been overshadowed by histories of conflict and antagonisms."-Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, Frederick Marquand Professor of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University "Portraits of Empire is an accessible and beautifully produced book that will be of great interest to scholars of early modern Central Europe, the Ottoman empire, and the Holy Roman Empire, as well as visual and material culture more generally."-Frederick Crofts, European History Quarterly "In sum, Portraits of Empires combines a wealth of hugely impressive archival research and insightful analysis of its visual source material into a book brimming with ideas. Art historians, historians of collecting, but also all those interested in the intertwined histories of central Europe and the Ottoman Empire will find a great deal to reward close reading of this rich, learned, and thought-provoking study."-Simon Mills, Newcastle University, Journal of Early Modern History

You may also like

Recently viewed