Special Offprint of 'Medieval Encounters', Vol. 18/2-3 (2012).
When the mendicant orders were founded in the thirteenth century, they quickly began to cultivate mutually beneficial relationships with the emerging merchant class, but these relationships have rarely been addressed by scholars. 'Mendicants and Merchants in the Medieval Mediterranean', edited by Taryn Chubb and Emily Kelley, is an interdisciplinary study of the intricate connections that developed between the two groups, focusing specifically on three examples of mendicant-merchant interaction in Barcelona, Mallorca and Florence. The studies in this volume demonstrate the complexities of commercial and religious trade and exchange in the region and they reveal the extent to which the friars and merchants came to depend upon one another.
Author(s): Taryn E. L. Chubb, Emily D. Kelley (eds.)
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 160
Taryn E. L. Chubb and Emily Kelley / Mendicants and Merchants in the Medieval Mediterranean: An Introduction 1
Antonio M. Zaldívar / Patricians' Embrace of the Dominican Convent of St. Catherine in Thirteenth-Century Barcelona 26
Robin Vose / Friars on the Edge: Socio-Economic Networking and the Dominicans of Conquered Mallorca 59
Allie Terry-Fritsch / Florentine Convent as Practiced Place: Cosimo de’Medici, Fra Angelico, and the Public Library of San Marco 82
Francisco García-Serrano / Conclusion: The Mendicants as a Mediterranean Phenomenon 124
Book Reviews 142
Index i