The Mediterranean Historical Review Book Series
About the Book Series
The Mediterranean Historical Review Book Series approaches the topic of the history and historiography of the Mediterranean region from a broad, cross-chronological, generalizing angle, aiming to enhance, promote, and challenge the growing body of scholarship focusing on the Mediterranean as a geo-historical framework for the study of human interactions. The series aims to be gender-balanced in all avenues of its activity. It is holistic in the historical narratives it wishes to convey: temporally, it covers the long term of events, from pre-history to recent history; disciplinarily, it encourages multi-perspective approaches combining material culture, geography, anthropology and environmental studies. As such, it seeks contributions - whether monographs or collected volumes - that transcend particular localizations, conventional periodization, and eventual examination, exploring rather the intricate human experience within the Mediterranean context.
For more information about contributing to the series please contact the editors: Gil Gambash ([email protected]) and Monique O'Connell ([email protected]).
Those Who Stayed, 1922: Political Transitions and Minority Strategies of Endurance in the Eastern Mediterranean
1st Edition
Edited
By Angelos Dalachanis, Alexis Rappas
September 24, 2025
The year 1922 marks a major turning point in Eastern Mediterranean history, with the abolition of the Ottoman Sultanate concluding a long period of upheaval known as the “Eastern Question.” As the empire gave way to European colonization and the nation-state model, its once multicultural societies ...