Review:
"The contributions are marked by careful scholarship and lively (even racy) presentation. As befits a celebration of Queller, they also contain genial humor ... engaged but warm-spirited debate ... and serious whimsy." -- James S. Grubb, Journal of Interdisciplinary History "A substantial and thought-provoking volume... Glued together by a common focus on Venice between the twelfth and the eighteenth centuries, the thirteen articles exhibit a unity of interest alongside a heartening diversity of subject matter, methodology and writing style... The crop of American and British historians and topics represented here is of the best, and the book in effect constitutes a declaration about the state of Anglo-Saxon research on Venice at the end of the twentieth century." - Kate Lowe, Times Literary Supplement "Thanks to studies of this kind, we get a more complex and realistic idea of the long-term relationship between Jews and Christians in the city of the lagoons." -Benjamin Arbel, The Medieval Review "A real harvest of the Middle Ages... In this single volume readers not only can see reflected the interests of one of America's foremost medievalists but also can track the historiographical trajectory of medieval history as practiced in America." -- Louis Haas, The Historian "The whole volume is well prepared, with endnotes by chapter, a comprehensive index, and a contributor list. It will be a useful addition to the bookshelf of the Venetian expert, the student of Italian Renaissance, and the collectors of the classic works by and about the principal laborers in this vineyard." -- Margaret L. King, Journal of Modern History ADVANCE PRAISE "This collection, marked by an impressive list of authors of distinction, captures the breadth and depth of scholarly inquiry medieval and Renaissance Venice has inspired over the last few decades."-Joanne Ferraro, author of Family and Public Life in Brescia, 1580-1650: The Foundations of Power in the Early Modern Venetian State "The intelligence and substance of Donald Queller's personal scholarly legacy is in its own way a unifying force for this choice and rich collection. The contributors are all first-rate, world-class scholars in their fields, and their essays embody some of their latest work in their individual areas of research and thinking. This is a volume for scholars, but there is much here that would also appeal to the lay enthusiast."-John W. Barker, author of Justinian and the Later Roman Empire
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