Politics and culture in international historyTransaction Publishers |
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Page xi
... European Realm 238 A. Ideological Foundations 238 B. The Relationship of Image to Reality in Western European Politics 248 C. The Reality of the Western European Community in the Middle Ages 254 a. The Influence of the Catholic Church ...
... European Realm 238 A. Ideological Foundations 238 B. The Relationship of Image to Reality in Western European Politics 248 C. The Reality of the Western European Community in the Middle Ages 254 a. The Influence of the Catholic Church ...
Page xii
... European Approaches to Political Myths and Realities 441 C. The Modern State 447 a. Sicily: a Prologue 447 b. The Modern State in its Western European Setting 451 c. The Modern European State and Non-Western Societies 454 D. European ...
... European Approaches to Political Myths and Realities 441 C. The Modern State 447 a. Sicily: a Prologue 447 b. The Modern State in its Western European Setting 451 c. The Modern European State and Non-Western Societies 454 D. European ...
Page xviii
... European guidance and protection; that African economies cannot sustain African states; and are accountable only for famines; and that the vast continent is awash with refugess fleeing from war, poverty, and repression and seeking ...
... European guidance and protection; that African economies cannot sustain African states; and are accountable only for famines; and that the vast continent is awash with refugess fleeing from war, poverty, and repression and seeking ...
Page xix
... European element. The inability to assimilate literacy and Christianity in the manner foreseen especially by King Alfonso, meant that the primary norms for the development of the Kongo into a state on the European model could not be met ...
... European element. The inability to assimilate literacy and Christianity in the manner foreseen especially by King Alfonso, meant that the primary norms for the development of the Kongo into a state on the European model could not be met ...
Page xxviii
... European, or American — without having them break the form, or denature the irreducible essence of that which calls itself Japan. Throughout the twentieth century, surely one of the most trying periods in their history, the Japanese ...
... European, or American — without having them break the form, or denature the irreducible essence of that which calls itself Japan. Throughout the twentieth century, surely one of the most trying periods in their history, the Japanese ...
Contents
3 | |
17 | |
The Pattern of Empire in the Ancient Near East in the First | 36 |
B The Greek CityStates | 66 |
The Empire of Alexander the Great and the Hel | 90 |
Greece and India | 118 |
b The Fusion of Stoicism and Buddhism in the Greco | 126 |
The Place of the Chinese State in Asia | 133 |
The Byzantine Realm | 298 |
Byzantine Diplomacy | 324 |
The Muslim Realm | 357 |
PART IV | 387 |
The Mediterranean Elites and the Furtherance | 399 |
The Scholars and the Propagation of Literate Knowledge | 412 |
The Intellectual Ascendancy of Western Europe | 425 |
E The Medieval Universities of Western Europe and their | 432 |
The Place of Rome in International Relations | 162 |
H The Internationalization of the Law of Contract and | 206 |
New Perspectives | 215 |
The Chief Elements in Mediterranean Power Politics | 226 |
The Medieval Western European Realm | 238 |
The Reality of the Western European Community in | 254 |
b The Christian Community of Western Europe and | 268 |
E New Departures in Intercultural Relations | 289 |
The Political Ascendancy of Western Europe | 438 |
E European Patterns of Transtentorial and Transnational | 499 |
a Transterritorial Union | 505 |
International Constitutionalism and the World | 513 |
Bibliography | 523 |
Index | 539 |
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