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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Jul 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Jun 30, 2030 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101165869 |
From the late sixteenth century, enslaved Muslims were found across Mediterranean Europe, hosted in all major port towns in France, Spain and Italy.
Mainly North Africans, Turks and Moriscos seized in the Mediterranean during the skirmishes between Christian and Ottoman forces, their movements and activities left traces across many European and Middle Eastern archives.
Some were sold to become domestic slaves, some were traded in exchange for Christian prisoners in Islamic land, while the majority were employed to row on board the galleys.
Their hybrid position, spanning geographical and cultural boundaries, allowed them to move across two worlds, in some cases literally importing goods and medical remedies from Islamic lands to Europe.
During periods of non-navigation, they were allowed on land to set up shops and sell to the local population, in a virtually unexplored phenomenon of cross-cultural exchange.This transnational and interdisciplinary project will investigate an array of sources in five countries, three continents and seven languages, spanning from archival documents, printed sources, literary evidence and material survivals across Europe and the Middle East.
Its goal is to recover the role of Muslim slaves in the transmission of Islamic material culture, techniques, and medical practices to Europe in the early modern period.
UNSEEN will bring for the first time under a unifying macro-narrative of Mediterranean global history the myriad of single local micro-histories fragmented along regional, linguistic and disciplinary divides.
An ERC Starting Grant will allow a team of researchers to analyse the bountiful traces left by those enslaved individuals in Spanish, French, Italian, English, Latin, Ottoman, and Arabic sources and reassign to them the role of triggers of the first European engagement with the artistic, technical, and medical production of the Islamic world, placing them at the centre of a Mediterranean-wide knowledge network.
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford
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