The Muslims of Medieval Italy
edited by Alex Metcalfe
Alex Metcalfe focuses on the formation and fragmentation
of an Arab-Muslim state and its society in Sicily and south Italy between 800
and 1300, which led to the formation of an enduring Muslim Christian frontier
during the age of the Crusades. It examines the long- and short-term impact of
Muslim authority in regions that were to fall into the hands of European
rulers, and explains how and why Muslim and Norman conquests imported radically
different dynamics to the central Mediterranean. On the island of Sicily, a
majority Muslim population came to be ruled by Christian kings who adopted and
adapted political ideologies from Mediterranean regimes, while absorbing
cultural influences from the diverse peoples over whom they reigned.