The present paper completes Unit I of my third project, "Seeking Christians and Spices: The Quest for the Maritime Route to India". You may view the previous chapters on my author's page on the Academia site:
https://www.academia.edu/41214506/How_Wide_Spans_the_Ocean_Sea
https://www.academia.edu/42166248/Beyond_the_Pillars_of_Hercules
https://www.academia.edu/43517659/The_Rediscovered_Islands_European_Claims_to_the_Canaries
The popular trope associates the Late Middle Ages with the incessant strife of antagonistic faiths which took shape of a crusade and a jihad. My research calls this pervasive approach into question due to the presence of the restricted contingents of Latin Europeans on the southern shores of the Mediterranean. Giving an account for this phenomenon requires a new set of arguments. Religious fanaticism was not the only platform to drum up support for achieving one’s goals. The first part of the chapter focuses on the involvement of European mercenaries, merchants, and monks in the Maghrib. The second part deals with the vagaries of the Trans-Saharan trade. The third part treats the mythical aspect of West African geography, the Island of Gold, and a real group of go-betweens in the gold-for-salt trade.
You may read this chapter and take part in Discussions that I have just launched:
https://www.academia.edu/63196943/The_Quest_for_the_River_of_Gold
I made up my mind to quit this project for a while as what was supposed to be Unit II has developed into a separate venture dedicated to seafaring in the medieval and Renaissance Mediterranean.
In the new year, I am going to upload the rest of the chapters from my second project, "The Enchanting Encounter with the East". Stay tuned!
Meanwhile, I started a new blog, Michael Baizerman's Newsletter, where I posted my first entry, Presenting Myself: https://michaelbaizerman.substack.com/p/presenting-myself
where I speak about my four projects.
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