A prominent Mediterranean port located near Islamic territories,
the city of Valencia in the late fifteenth century boasted a slave
population of pronounced religious and ethnic diversity: captive
Moors and penally enslaved Mudejars, Greeks, Tartars, Russians,
Circassians, and a growing population of black Africans. By the end
of the fifteenth century, black Africans comprised as much as 40
percent of the slave population of Valencia.
Whereas previous historians of medieval slavery have focused
their efforts on defining the legal status of slaves, documenting
the vagaries of the Mediterranean slave trade, or examining slavery
within the context of Muslim-Christian relations, Debra Blumenthal
explores the social and human dimensions of slavery in this
religiously and ethnically pluralistic society. Enemies and
Familiars traces the varied experiences of Muslim, Eastern, and
black African slaves from capture to freedom. After describing how
men, women, and children were enslaved and brought to the Valencian
marketplace, this book examines the substance of slaves' daily
lives: how they were sold and who bought them; the positions
ascribed to them within the household hierarchy; the sorts of labor
they performed; and the ways in which some reclaimed their freedom.
Scrutinizing a wide array of archival sources (including wills,
contracts, as well as hundreds of civil and criminal court cases),
Blumenthal investigates what it meant to be a slave and what it
meant to be a master at a critical moment of transition.
Arguing that the dynamics of the master-slave relationship both
reflected and determined contemporary opinions regarding religious,
ethnic, and gender differences, Blumenthal's close study of the
day-to-day interactions between masters and their slaves not only
reveals that slavery played a central role in identity formation in
late medieval Iberia but also offers clues to the development of
"racialized" slavery in the early modern Atlantic world.
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