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The African Prester John and the Birth of Ethiopian-European Relations, 1402-1555
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Table of Contents

  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Part One: The Mediterranean Way
    • Chapter 1: Ethiopians in the Lagoon, 1402–1459.
      • The Stato da Mar and the Christian Highlands
      • 1402
      • Maps and Itineraries
    • Chapter 2: The Crown of Aragon, 1427–1453
      • Valencia
      • Naples
    • Chapter 3: Rome via Jerusalem, 1439–1484
      • Ethiopians at the Council of Florence
      • Ethiopian Initiatives
      • The Establishing of Santo Stefano degli Abissini
    • Chapter 4: Lisbon, 1441–1508
      • The Atlantic Way
      • The Indian Way
  • Part Two: The Indian Run
    • Chapter 5: Beyond the Sea, 1509–1520
      • Matewos’s Mission
      • Mare Rubrum
    • Chapter 6: Shewa, 1400s–1526
      • The First Faranji
      • Faranji at Court in the Late 15th Century
      • Lima at Court
    • Chapter 7:A Tale of Three Cities, 1527–1539
      • Bologna
      • Rome
      • Lisbon
    • Chapter 8: Ending the War and the Encounter, 1540–1555
      • The Barber-Bleeder Turned Patriarch
      • The Ethiopian Monk Who Almost Turned Missionary
      • The Ethiopian Monk Turned Catholic Bishop
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix: leading political figures
    • Ethiopian Emperors
    • Kings of Portugal
    • Governors and Viceroys of the Estado da India
    • Roman Pontiffs
  • Bibliography
    • Archival sources
    • Published sources
    • Secondary literature

About the Author

Matteo Salvadore is Assistant Professor of History at American University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.

Reviews

Matteo Salvadore has written that rarest of books, one that considers not just how Europe shaped Africa, but how Africa shaped Europe. In this fascinating account--full of vivid characters, lively writing, and surprising findings--Salvadore overturns many misconceptions about early modern African-Europeans relations, not the least of which is that Prester John was a mere European fantasy having nothing to do with African discourse. This remarkable intellectual history, taking advantage of rare Italian and Portuguese sources, will change how many see not just Ethiopia, but the global middle ages.Wendy Laura Belcher, Associate Professor Princeton University, USA (author of Abyssinia’s Samuel Johnson: Ethiopian Thought in the Making of an English Author)The multiple viewpoints in this readable and scholarly study of the external relations of the once mythical and mysterious Christian kingdom of Ethiopia will surprise specialists and appeal to readers interested in global history.David Northrup, Emeritus Professor, Boston College, USA

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