The Medieval MediterraneanIslamic and Norman Sicily (800–1200) |
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37. The History of Hugo FalcandusWas ' Falcandus' actually 'Foucault', the abbot of Saint-Denis near Paris? Does it matter? What is the relationship, if any, between the History and the Letter to Peter? Is it possible to characterize a 'Falcandian' viewpoint of Sicilian history?
Source materialsFor Siragusa's 1897 edition of the Latin text, see La Historia o Liber de Regno Sicilie e la Epistola ad Petrum Panormitane Ecclesie Thesaurium di Ugo Falcando. A hypertextualised Latin version is available from Intratext. The History of the Tyrants of Sicily by Hugo Falcandus 1154-69. Translated and annotated by Graham A. Loud and Thomas Wiedemann (Manchester, 1998) .pdf limited access.
Introductory readingOn the text itself and questions of authorship, see: Loud and Wiedemann, pp. 1–53. (.pdf limited access) Gwyneth Hood, 'Falcandus and Fulcaundus, Epistola ad Petrum, Liber del Regno Sicilie. Literary form and the author's identity', Studi Medievali 90 (1999), 1–41. Evelyn Jamison, Admiral Eugenius of Sicily. His Life and Work and the Authorship of the Epistola ad Petrum and the Historia Hugonis Falcandi Siculi (London, 1957).
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List of topic areas1. Early history of the central Mediterranean 2. Sources for medieval Mediterranean history 3. Introduction to Mediterranean historiography 4. Geography of Sicily and the central Mediterranean 5. Arab-Muslim North Africa (647–827) 6. Late Byzantine Sicily and the Muslim conquest 7. Christians under Muslim rule 8. The Amirate of Bari 9. Law and learning in Muslim Sicily 10. Rebellions in the Fatimid period 11. Taxation, land tenure, the army and administration 12. Ibn Hawqal In Sicily 13. The Muslim Civil War (c.1030–60) 14. South Italy before the Normans 15. Al-Mujāhid's attack on Sardinia 16. The rise of the Normans in south Italy 17. The Hilalian ‘invasion' of Zirid Ifrīqiya 18. The Norman conquest of Sicily (1061–72) 19. The Norman conquest of Sicily and Malta (1072–91) 20. Muslim responses to the Norman conquest 21. Ecclesiastical lordships 22. The rise of new administrators 23. The early Norman administration of lands and men in Sicily 24. Rebellious lords and the incastellamento question 25. The regency of Adelaide 26. Christodoulos and George of Antioch 27. Roger II as Count of Sicily 28. Sicily and the Mediterranean (1118–28) 29. Formation of the new kingdom 30. Consolidation and development of the kingdom 31. Law, authority and kingship 32. Art and architecture of the royal palaces 33. The royal fiscal administration of lands and men 34. The trial of Philip of Mahdiyya 35. The Norman conquest and loss of Africa 36. William I and the crises of 1155–6 37. The History of Hugo Falcandus 38. The revolts of 1161–2 39. Stephen of Perche and the French contingents 40. Science, translation and patronage 41. The familiares regis 42. External relations and overseas diplomacy 43. The foundation of Monreale 44. Ibn Jubayr in Sicily 45. Abū l-Qāsim and the Muslims 46. The reign of Tancred 47. Markward and the 'amirate in the mountains' 48. The Norman legacy 49. Frederick II and the Staufen dynasty 50. The Sicilian Vespers |
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