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Collective Bibliography

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© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Acknowledgements VII
  3. Contents XI
  4. Part I: Conceptualizing the Black Sea Region
  5. Introduction: Historical and Cultural Perspectives on the Black Sea Region 1
  6. Mapping the Black Sea: From the Sea to the Region and beyond 15
  7. The Black Sea as a Historical Meso-Region 31
  8. Circle(s) and Circulation(s) as Constitutive of the Black Sea (World) 45
  9. The Black Sea Region as a Natural Region 59
  10. Part II: The Black Sea History from Antiquity until the Twentieth Century
  11. Antiquity 77
  12. The Black Sea in the Middle Ages 93
  13. The Ottoman Empire, the Crimean Khanate, Poland-Lithuania, Persia, and Others: The Northern Black Sea Region (Fourteenth−Eighteenth Centuries) 107
  14. The Ottoman Empire, Safavid Iran, and the Southern Black Sea between 1500 and 1700 125
  15. Forging the Empires in Competition: Russian and Ottoman Transimperial History around the Black Sea until World War I 137
  16. The Black Sea Region during World War I and the Interwar Periods: The Forging of a Modern Identity 151
  17. Mare Clausum: War and Diplomacy on the Black Sea, 1939 –91 165
  18. Part III: Ideas and Identities
  19. Regional Concepts in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries 183
  20. Nation-building and Nationalism in the Black Sea Region (Nineteenth–Twenty-First Centuries) 197
  21. Christians and Their Collective Identities around the Black Sea after 1453 221
  22. Muslims and Jews in the Black Sea Region 239
  23. Between Imposed Memory and Damnatio Memoriae: Places of Memory in the Black Sea Region 277
  24. Ruptured Histories, Contested Memories, Fluid Borders: Monuments in the Northern Black Sea Region from Catherine II to the Russo-Ukrainian War 315
  25. Ancient Myths and Legends of the Black Sea: An Integrative Analysis 363
  26. Russian Literature on Crimea, the Caucasus, and the Black Sea 391
  27. Ukrainian Literature on the Black Sea 405
  28. Women in the Black Sea Region: Education, Intellectual Exchange, and International Contacts (1850s–1930s) 423
  29. Part IV: Mobility and Transfers
  30. Nomadic Migration Waves in the Pontic Region (Fourth–Thirteenth Centuries) 445
  31. Migration around the Black Sea (from the Mid-thirteenth Century to 1700) 463
  32. Migration in the Black Sea Region in the Modern Period (Late Eighteenth–Twentieth Centuries) 483
  33. Slavery 497
  34. Education and Sciences in the Black Sea Region (Eighteenth–Twenty-First Centuries) 515
  35. Transport Technologies and Infrastructure in the Premodern Era 529
  36. Transport Technologies and Infrastructure: 1800 until World War I 539
  37. Oil, Natural Gas, and More: Infrastructures of Energy around and across the Black and Caspian Seas since the Late Nineteenth Century 559
  38. Part V: Violence, Conflict, and Conflict Resolution
  39. Black Sea Pirates and Bandits—until 1475 579
  40. Pirates and Bandits after 1475 599
  41. Naval History of the Black Sea 621
  42. The Crimean War 651
  43. Russian Imperial Church Policy in the Black Sea Region (1856 –1914) 663
  44. The Persecution and Destruction of Jews in the Black Sea Region 677
  45. Deportations in the Context of World War II 691
  46. Territorial Conflict and Secessionism in the Post-Soviet Black Sea Region 707
  47. Straits, Bridges, and Canals: The Black Sea Region and Russo-Ukrainian Conflict 2014 – 22 721
  48. List of Illustrations 739
  49. List of Contributors 741
  50. Collective Bibliography 745
  51. Index of Persons 751
  52. Index of Places 761
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