Iberian Encounter and Exchange, 475-1755
The Iberian Peninsula has historically been an area of the world that fostered encounters and exchanges among peoples from different societies. For centuries, Iberia acted as a nexus for the circulation of ideas, people, objects, and technology around the pre-modern western Mediterranean, Atlantic, and eventually the Pacific. Iberian Encounter and Exchange, 475-1755 combines a broad thematic scope with the territorial limits of the Iberian Peninsula and its global contacts. In doing so, works in this series will juxtapose previously disparate areas of study and challenge scholars to rethink the role of encounter and exchange in the formation of the modern world. We encourage proposals for books that address all aspects of this theme in the medieval and early modern Iberian context.
Series Editors
Erin Kathleen Rowe, The Johns Hopkins University
Michael A. Ryan, University of New Mexico
Advisory Board
Paul H. Freedman, Yale University
Richard Kagan, The Johns Hopkins University
Marie Kelleher, California State University, Long Beach
Ricardo Padrón, University of Virginia
Teofilo F. Ruiz, UCLA
Marta V. Vicente, University of Kansas
For more information contact the Penn State University Press:
Eleanor H. Goodman
Executive Editor, egoodman@psu.edu
or the series editors:
Erin Kathleen Rowe, erowe1@jhu.edu
Michael A. Ryan, ryan6@unm.edu