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Stefan Stantchev, Venice, the Ottomans, and the Sea (1381–1517), OUP: 2025

  • Writer: ssclesite
    ssclesite
  • Aug 30
  • 2 min read

Updated: Sep 5


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The later Middle Ages and the early modern period were important and overlapping historical moments for both Venice and the Ottoman Empire, yet the two--both the periods themselves and the Republic and Empire more generally--have often been considered in isolation. Seeking to understand better this interrelated transition, Venice, the Ottomans, and the Sea offers for the first time an integrated view of trade and sea power that transcends the overworn paradigms of trade – the Ottoman territories as a land of opportunity –and crusade – the Ottomans as a military threat – to uncover the complex interplay between economic structures and political decision making that shaped the period between the end of Venice's most devastating war with Genoa in 1381 and the Ottoman conquest of Mamluk Egypt in 1517.


Drawing on the full range of available Venetian sources, as well as Ottoman, Genoese, Florentine, and papal materials, the book clarifies the trajectory of Venice's trade with the Ottomans, the evolution of Venetian defensive measures in the Balkans and of Venetian naval warfare, Venice's attempt to aid the Byzantine Empire in 1453, the dynamics of the Venetian-Ottoman war of 1463-79, and the interconnections between Venice's social and political structures and its Italian and Ottoman politics. In so doing, it offers a comprehensive analysis of Venetian-Ottoman relations, ranging from macro to micro scales, and across matters of economic, political, and military history. From a broader Mediterranean perspective, this highlights the intersections of political, social, economic, and technological factors behind accelerated historical change in the late medieval and early modern periods and offers a case study in the ways in which a Mediterranean elite maintained its privileged position over time.


272 pp, 3 maps. Oxford University Press, 2025, $130/£99.

The 11th SSCLE Quadrennial Conference, 'Crossing Seas, Crossing Cultures' will be held at the University of Porto, 29 June–3 July 2026

About the Society

The Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East (SSCLE), is an international society of scholars founded in 1980. It aims to promote research and fieldwork, coordinating resources, informing its members of resources and ongoing studies, and promoting awareness of its members and the interested public in developments in the field.

© 2025 Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East

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