Table of contents : Cover Half Title Series Page Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents Preface Abbreviations Acknowledgements Chapter 1 The Mediterranean and ‘The New Thalassology’ I II III IV V VI Notes Chapter 2 Years of Corruption: Some Responses to Critics [of The Corrupting Sea] I Quid eis cum pelago? The response by discipline II Les auteurs ne se noient jamais dans leur Méditerranée: theory and scope III Doughnuts in cyberspace: finding the metaphor IV Falsifiability V Monstrous squid or calamari? VI Doing without towns VII Managing monotheisms VIII Render unto Caesar: in quest of narrative Notes Chapter 3 The Boundless Sea of Unlikeness?: On Defining the Mediterranean I The origins of corruption II Not ours: some difficulties with appropriation III What kind of edges? Towards Mediterranean désenclavement IV Histoire à très large échelle Notes Chapter 4 Fixity I Claims about fixity II The essential implausibility of fixity III Christian realism? IV The uses of fixity Notes Selected general bibliography Chapter 5 Meshwork: Towards a Historical Ecology of Mediterranean Cities I II III IV V Notes Chapter 6 The Ancient Mediterranean: The View from the Customs House I On the usefulness of the history of taxation II Taxation and mobility III Three phases of Mediterranean evidence IV Managing interdependence: the nature of the network V Progressive regression? VI Athens and Rome: Mediterranean and other hegemonies VII The edges of the system: conclusion Notes Chapter 7 Colonisation and Mediterranean History I Introduction II Agrosystems and seaways III Frontiers and mobilities IV The ‘most resettled land known’: the example of south Italy V Conclusion: problems of focus Notes Chapter 8 The Mediterranean and the European Economy in the Early Middle Ages I The Mediterranean and Europe II Depressions? III Communications IV Oppressions V Reckonings Notes Chapter 9 Water in Mediterranean History Notes Chapter 10 Tide, Beach, and Backwash: The Place of Maritime Histories I Introductory II Two problems with thalassography III The beach: maritime onset – becoming maritime IV The tide: maritime mobilisation V The backwash: spaces of recursivity VI A place of thalassography: the West Asian hinge Notes Chapter 11 Situations Both Alike?: Connectivity, the Mediterranean, the Sahara Connectivity Saharan routes Modern routes Nodes Ramifications Notes Chapter 12 Mediterranean Connectivity: A Comparative Approach I Changing horizons II The Sahara III The Silk Road IV Europe V Conclusion? Notes Index