Papers by Roxani Eleni Margariti
KENTRO: The Newsletter of the INSTAP Study Center for East Crete, 2022
Networked Spaces: The Spatiality of Networks in the Red Sea and Western Indian Ocean. Edited by Caroline Durand, Julie Marchand, Bérangère Redon, and Pierre Schneider. Lyon: MOM Editions, , 2022
This study highlights published and unpublished materials from the Hemprich‑Ehrenberg expedition ... more This study highlights published and unpublished materials from the Hemprich‑Ehrenberg expedition in the Red Sea in the first quarter of the 19th century and argues that its Nachlass constitutes an informative time capsule of scientific travel networks in the region as well as a palimpsest of local knowledge, particularly regarding maritime topography and marine and insular life.
Islam Through Objects. Edited by Anna Bigelow. Bloomsbury,, 2021
This paper examines a series of Islamic coins struck in Rasulid Yemen in the 8th/14th century and... more This paper examines a series of Islamic coins struck in Rasulid Yemen in the 8th/14th century and analyzes them as carriers of messages about politics and religion, instruments of economy, and material objects of everyday life.
Der Islam, 2021
Relying on textual, ethnographic, and environmental scholarship on Yemen and the comparat... more Relying on textual, ethnographic, and environmental scholarship on Yemen and the comparative insights of research into fisheries in the premodern Mediterranean world, the present study surveys the types of marine resources that appear across a wide range of literary and documentary sources pertaining to Yemen during the reign of the Rasūlids from the early 7th/13th to the mid-9th/15th century. Although Rasūlid-generated texts pay relatively scant attention to fishing, they clearly demonstrate the interest of the Rasūlid state in both the subsistence and commercial economy that fishermen procured. Moreover, when combined with the testimony of travelers and chroniclers and of iconography on a series of Rasūlid coins from the port city of Aden, these sources shed light on the inclusion of fish in Yemeni non-elite and elite diets, the place and roles of fish-erfolk in Yemeni society, the maritime symbolism current in Rasūlid times, and ultimately the relationship between shores and inland centers of Rasūlid power. In aggregate this material suggests that the Rasūlid state maintained a symbiotic political and cultural relationship with fishing communities, which had direct access to and the primary role in harvesting and processing the resources in question, yet remain in the shadows of recorded history.
Oxford Research Encyclopedias: Asian History, 2019
Epigraphic materials, travel narratives, religious-legal literature, and documents of daily life ... more Epigraphic materials, travel narratives, religious-legal literature, and documents of daily life produced by or for Jews between the 7th and the 13th centuries add significant dimensions to our understanding of the history of trade across Asia. Written in a variety of Jewish languages, these sources hail from places across the Afro-Eurasian geographical continuum and speak to the two well-known circuits of medieval trans-Asian trade: the Silk Road and its maritime Indian Ocean equivalent. While there has been a tendency to look at medieval Jewish sources scattered across Asia as vestiges of a unified trading diaspora, a consideration of these sources’ volume, chronology, and the circumstances of their production and use reveals several disjunctures and suggests a more fractured history of Jewish participation in Asia trade. Even so a survey of these sources illuminates a variety of topics that relate to Jewish mercantile activity along well-trodden avenues of exchange, transactions and relationships across confessional lines, and the structures and institutions of transregional commerce.
Jewish History, 2019
As the densest single corpus of documents pertaining to everyday life in the medieval Middle East... more As the densest single corpus of documents pertaining to everyday life in the medieval Middle East and Islamic world before the 1250s, the Cairo Geniza material has been mined to investigate not only the economic roles of Jews in the Islamicate world they inhabited but also the relationship between merchants and the state, the structure of business ties, the nature, market share, and circulation of specific commodities, monetization, and geographies of trade connecting the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. Building on more than half a century of Geniza scholarship on the medieval economy, recent work has highlighted the role of legal institutions in economic transactions, has elaborated on the question of the typicality of Jewish economic actors in the Islamicate marketplace, and has deepened the inquiry into regional and transregional economies.
Journal of Economic and Social History of the Orient, 2017
The story of an Indian king's conversion to Islam by the prophet Muhammad and of the subsequent f... more The story of an Indian king's conversion to Islam by the prophet Muhammad and of the subsequent foundation by Arab Muslims of communities and mosques across the sovereign's former dominion in Kerala appears in various Arabic and Malayalam literary iterations. The most remarkable among them is the Qiṣṣat Shakarwatī Farmāḍ. This legend of community origins is here translated from the Arabic in full for the first time. Historians have dealt with such origin stories by transmitting them at face value, rejecting their historicity, or sifting them for kernels of historical truth. The comparative approach adopted here instead juxtaposes the Qiṣṣa with a Malayalam folksong and other Indian Ocean narratives of conversion as related in medieval Arabic travel literature to reveal underlying archetypes of just or enlightened kings as sponsors of community. The legend emerges as a crucial primary source for the constitution and self-definition of Islam in Kerala and for the discursive claims of this community vis-à-vis others. Keywords Buzurg b. Shahriyār-Chera dynasty-Ibn Battuta-Indian Ocean Islam-Kerala-Malayalam-Mappilas-merchants-Muhammad-Onam-Qurʾan-Ṣūfism-conversion
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The Sea: Thalassography and Historiography, 2012
e prevailing image of the Indian Ocean world of trade before the arrival of western Europeans and... more e prevailing image of the Indian Ocean world of trade before the arrival of western Europeans and Ottomans in the region in the sixteenth century is one of a generally peaceful, confl ict-free realm dominated by cosmopolitan traders who moved easily across boundaries of geography, ethnicity, language, and religion. is paper modifi es this picture by examining the evidence for confl ict and competition between pre-modern maritime polities in the western end of the Indian Ocean. In the fi fth/eleventh and sixth/twelfth centuries maritime polities on the islands of Kish in the Persian Gulf and Dahlak in the Red Sea antagonized Aden's supremacy as the region's most frequented entrepot. In the subsequent three centuries, the Ayyubids and Rasulids of Yemen also strove to control maritime routes and networks.
Books by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Edited Volumes by Roxani Eleni Margariti
This volume brings together articles on the cultural, religious, social and commercial interactio... more This volume brings together articles on the cultural, religious, social and commercial interactions among Jews, Christians and Muslims in the medieval and early modern periods. Written by leading scholars in Jewish studies, Islamic studies, medieval history and social and economic history, the contributions to this volume re ect the profound in uence on these elds of the volume's honoree, Professor Mark R. Cohen. Readership Scholars and students interested in the history of interreligious encounters in pre-modern times will nd this volume of indispensible value. The book will especially appeal to those who seek to delve into the literary, legal, and social manifestations of such encounters.
For four decades Abraham L. Udovitch has been a leading scholar of the medieval Islamic world, it... more For four decades Abraham L. Udovitch has been a leading scholar of the medieval Islamic world, its economic institutions, social structures, and legal theory and practice. In pursuing his quest to understand and explain the complex phenomena that these broad rubrics entail, he has published widely, collaborated internationally with other leading scholars of the Middle East and medieval history, and most saliently for the purposes of this volume, taught several cohorts of students at Princeton University. This volume is therefore dedicated to his intellectual legacy from a uniquely revealing angle: the current work of his former students. The papers in this volume range chronologically from the period preceding the rise of Islam in Arabia to the Mamluk era, geographically from the Western Mediterranean to the Western Indian Ocean and thematically from the political negotiations of Christian and Islamic Mediterranean sovereigns to the historiography of Western Indian Ocean port cities.
Drafts by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Paper proposal submission deadline has been extended to December 31, 2021!
Please refer to the t... more Paper proposal submission deadline has been extended to December 31, 2021!
Please refer to the the conference website, https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/ and help us spread the word!
If you have previously submitted a paper proposal, you will be able to edit your submission until the new deadline of December 31, 2021.
You will be hearing from us about the status of your proposal on January 31, 2022.
We thank you and look forward to welcoming you in Crete in July 2022!
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
Postponed to June 2022! Due to the continuing uncertainties caused by the global public health c... more Postponed to June 2022! Due to the continuing uncertainties caused by the global public health crisis, the organizing committee has postponed the Red Sea Project X conference to June 2022. Although we are quite disappointed that we will not be able to convene and hear about exciting new Red Sea research this coming June, we very much look forward to welcoming you all in Crete in a year and a half!
The conference website is now up and running (https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/) and will remain so to disseminate information about the conference. We will be sending reminders about the reopening of the paper proposal submission function on the website, which will start receiving proposals again on September 1, 2021. Those who have already registered will not need to re-register. Those who have already submitted paper proposals will be able to edit your submissions should you wish to do so from September 1, 2021 and until the submission deadline on November 30, 2021.
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
The organization of Red Sea Project X is a collaboration between the Department of History and Archaeology at the University of Crete, the Institute for Mediterranean Studies of the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas, and the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies and Program in Mediterranean Studies at Emory University. Our conference will be hosted by the University of Crete and the Institute for Mediterranean Studies in the historic city of Rethymno, Crete, Greece, in June 2022. For updates, please visit the conference website at redsea10.ims.forth.gr. You can also address inquiries to Roxani Eleni Margariti ([email protected]) and Antonis Anastasopoulos ([email protected]).
Blog Posts by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Archives of the Sea, 2023
Fish skins made into leather and eventually a variety of objects has a poor archaeological visibi... more Fish skins made into leather and eventually a variety of objects has a poor archaeological visibility but the ethnographic record for its use is rich and quite widespread over the globe. This post discusses the issue of fish and marine mammal skins drawing connections between history, archaeology, ethnography and the modern world.
Archives of the Sea, 2021
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Papers by Roxani Eleni Margariti
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Books by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Edited Volumes by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Drafts by Roxani Eleni Margariti
Please refer to the the conference website, https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/ and help us spread the word!
If you have previously submitted a paper proposal, you will be able to edit your submission until the new deadline of December 31, 2021.
You will be hearing from us about the status of your proposal on January 31, 2022.
We thank you and look forward to welcoming you in Crete in July 2022!
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
The conference website is now up and running (https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/) and will remain so to disseminate information about the conference. We will be sending reminders about the reopening of the paper proposal submission function on the website, which will start receiving proposals again on September 1, 2021. Those who have already registered will not need to re-register. Those who have already submitted paper proposals will be able to edit your submissions should you wish to do so from September 1, 2021 and until the submission deadline on November 30, 2021.
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
The organization of Red Sea Project X is a collaboration between the Department of History and Archaeology at the University of Crete, the Institute for Mediterranean Studies of the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas, and the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies and Program in Mediterranean Studies at Emory University. Our conference will be hosted by the University of Crete and the Institute for Mediterranean Studies in the historic city of Rethymno, Crete, Greece, in June 2022. For updates, please visit the conference website at redsea10.ims.forth.gr. You can also address inquiries to Roxani Eleni Margariti ([email protected]) and Antonis Anastasopoulos ([email protected]).
Blog Posts by Roxani Eleni Margariti
https://archivesofthesea.com/en/the-strange-allure-of-ambergris-and-other-whale-wonders/
Downloaded from Brill.com05/14/2020 02:11:32AM via Emory University
Please refer to the the conference website, https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/ and help us spread the word!
If you have previously submitted a paper proposal, you will be able to edit your submission until the new deadline of December 31, 2021.
You will be hearing from us about the status of your proposal on January 31, 2022.
We thank you and look forward to welcoming you in Crete in July 2022!
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
The conference website is now up and running (https://redsea10.ims.forth.gr/) and will remain so to disseminate information about the conference. We will be sending reminders about the reopening of the paper proposal submission function on the website, which will start receiving proposals again on September 1, 2021. Those who have already registered will not need to re-register. Those who have already submitted paper proposals will be able to edit your submissions should you wish to do so from September 1, 2021 and until the submission deadline on November 30, 2021.
Conference Description
Occupying both the interstices and the center of overlapping fields of inquiry, the Red Sea as a geohistorical unit with many permutations and a deep chronological trajectory offers countless opportunities for investigation through the disciplines of history, archaeology, philology, anthropology, environmental sciences, area studies including Middle Eastern Studies, Indian Ocean Studies, and more. One perspective that prevailed in older historiographies is the definition of the Red Sea as "a sea on the way to somewhere else," a distorting narrative that the Red Sea Project conferences of the past two decades, with their resulting publications, have nuanced and corrected. In Red Sea Project X we will continue this endeavor of centering the Red Sea by focusing on the broad themes of historical and historiographical horizons, edges and transitions. Historiographies of liquid spaces, especially those of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean with which Red Sea studies clearly intersect, have fruitfully grappled with the notion of horizons in the quest for meaningful limits of geohistorical units of inquiry. Histories of real and metaphorical islands, shores, and edges have pushed the inquiry on maritime spaces and the literature on borders to new and sharper definitions. Red Sea Project X represents a milestone in the conference series: the previous nine projects have focused on crucial themes in the definition of the Red Sea geohistorical space, including trade and travel, Red Sea peoples and cultures, hinterlands and forelands, navigational and transportation networks, economies and natural resources, and human interaction with marine and littoral environments. With these cumulative contributions in mind, we invite proposals for papers that will explore edges and transitions in the histories and material cultures of the Red Sea, or reflect on the historical and historiographical horizons, divisions and invisible boundaries in Red Sea research. As the conference will take place on the island of Crete, Greece, we envision that transregional connectivities and comparative perspectives in maritime history, as well as the study of islands and insularity will continue to animate our joint inquiry. Conference themes will include: 1. Lines of sight, shores, and islands in the maritime experience 2. Archaeology and material culture of forelands, hinterlands, and contact zones 3. Movement, dependencies, and enslaved lives across geographic and temporal borders 4. The medieval and early modern, with an emphasis on the Ottoman, Red Sea 5. Traditional maritime technologies; the transition from the age of sail to the age of steam 6. Religion and the sea
The organization of Red Sea Project X is a collaboration between the Department of History and Archaeology at the University of Crete, the Institute for Mediterranean Studies of the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas, and the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies and Program in Mediterranean Studies at Emory University. Our conference will be hosted by the University of Crete and the Institute for Mediterranean Studies in the historic city of Rethymno, Crete, Greece, in June 2022. For updates, please visit the conference website at redsea10.ims.forth.gr. You can also address inquiries to Roxani Eleni Margariti ([email protected]) and Antonis Anastasopoulos ([email protected]).
https://archivesofthesea.com/en/the-strange-allure-of-ambergris-and-other-whale-wonders/