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Prior to the high Middle Ages, the Baltic Rim was largely terra
incognita-but by the late Middle Ages, it was home to diverse small
and large communities. But the Baltic Rim was not simply the place
those people lived-it was also an imagined space through which they
defined themselves and their identities. This book traces the
transformation of the Baltic Rim in this period through a focus on
the self-image of a number of communities: urban and regional,
cultic, missionary, legal, and political. Contributors look at the
ways these communities defined themselves in relationship to other
groups, how they constructed their identities and customs, and what
held them together or tore them apart.
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