Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/41541
Title: Late-medieval Mediterranean empires : Catalan example
Authors: Luttrell, Anthony T.
Keywords: Malta -- History -- Aragonese and Castillians, 1283-1530
Catalonia (Spain) -- History
Catalonia (Spain) -- Politics and government
Issue Date: 1977
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Arts
Citation: Luttrell, A. (1977). Late-medieval Mediterranean empires : Catalan example. Journal of the Faculty of Arts, 6(4), 109-115.
Abstract: 'Empire' may be defined as a 'supreme and wide (political) dominion. During the late middle ages the Kings of Aragon, who came to rule not only in Aragon, Catalunya and Valencia but also in the Balearics, Sardinia, Sicily, Naples and elsewhere, thought of their wide Mediterranean dominion, a dynastic confederation or commonwealth which was also a strategic sphere of influence and an economic community, as being in some sense an empire; and they could address its inhabitants, whatever their language or origins and whether or not they came immediately under the supreme rule of the Aragonese Crown, as their subjects or naturals - often using that term in Catalan, the imperial lingua franca.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/41541
Appears in Collections:Journal of the Faculty of Arts, Volume 6, Issue 4
Journal of the Faculty of Arts, Volume 6, Issue 4

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