La mayoría de quienes están interesados en estudios medievales encuentran que pueblos como ávaros, búlgaros, jázaros y cumanos casi han sido suprimidos de la historia, quedando aquella Europa del Este como un tema marginal y hasta exótico.
Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans
Edición de Florin Curta
Brill, 2007
Libro basado en las conferencias del Congreso Internacional de Estudios Medievales, Kalamazzo 2005-2007.
Indice
- Tivadar Vida, Conflict and coexistence: the local population of the Carpathian Basin under Avar rule (sixth to seventh century)
- Peter Stadler, Avar chronology revisited, and the question of ethnicity in the Avar qaganate
- Péter Somogyi, New remarks on the flow of Byzantine coins in Avaria and Walachia during the second half of the seventh century
- Uwe Fiedler, Bulgars in the Lower Danube region. A survey of the archaeological evidence and of the state of current research
- Orsolya Heinrich-Tamaska, Avar-age metalworking technologies in the Carpathian Basin (sixth to eighth century)
- Bartłomiej Szymon Szmoniewski, Two worlds, one hoard: what do metal finds from the forest-steppe belt speak about?
- Florin Curta, The earliest Avar-age stirrups, or the “stirrup controversy” revisited
- Valeri Iotov, A note on the “Hungarian sabers” of medieval Bulgaria
- Veselina Vachkova, Danube Bulgaria and Khazaria as part of the Byzantine oikoumene
- Tsvetelin Stepanov, From ‘steppe’ to Christian empire and back: Bulgaria between 800 and 1100
- Dimitri Korobeinikov, A broken mirror: the Kipçak world in the thirteenth century
- Victor Spinei, The Cuman bishopric – genesis and evolution
- Florin Curta, The history and archaeology of the “other Europe”. A bibliography