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44.4075158
8.9332508
“Sangue turco” e il problema di chiamarsi europei: un dibattito rinascimentale
Date
Sat 28 March 2026
Timings
16:00
Entry
Free
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“Sangue turco” e il problema di chiamarsi europei: un dibattito rinascimentale Che cos’è l’Europa? Chi sono gli europei? E che cosa sarà dell’Italia? Queste domande, per quanto possano sembrare di attualità, già si ponevano nel Rinascimento, grazie alla frenetica espansione dell’impero ottomano. Ma il cosiddetto “impero dei turchi”, al di là della forza delle sue armi, rappresentava anche una sfida sociale che apparve, ad alcuni osservatori dell’epoca, ancora più profonda e radicale di quella militare: un modello di stato che, in modo sistematico, escludeva dal potere chi nasceva di “sangue turco,” in parte per conservare uno spazio privilegiato ai rinnegati, profughi, schiavi, e altri neoarrivati dall’estero (compresi tanti italiani). Giancarlo Casale è professore di storia mediterranea e direttore del dipartimento di storia presso l’Istituto Universitario Europeo di Firenze. Tra i suoi libri: The Ottoman Age of Exploration (Oxford University Press, 2011), Prisoner of the Infidels (University of California Press, 2021), e On the Move: Mobility and Early Modern Translation (cur. con Ann Thomson, Brill, 2026).