Από τη βυζαντινή στη βενετική τούρμα (Κρήτη, 13ος-14ος αι.)

 
This item is provided by the institution :

Repository :
Byzantina Symmeikta  | ΕΚΤ eJournals
see the original item page
in the repository's web site and access all digital files if the item*
share




2008 (EN)

Από τη βυζαντινή στη βενετική τούρμα (Κρήτη, 13ος-14ος αι.) (EL)
Από τη βυζαντινή στη βενετική τούρμα (Κρήτη, 13ος-14ος αι.) (EN)

ΓΑΣΠΑΡΗΣ, Χαράλαμπος

  Charalambos GasparisFrom the Byzantine to Venetian turma. Crete, XIIIth -XlVth centuries Turma, a term coming from the Byzantine thematic system, is found very often in the XIIIth and XlVth century Venetian documents concerning the island of Crete. The Venetian turma in Crete was not an administrative or military term, but simply a geographical one, to indicate the exact post of fiefs and villages. Byzantine turma had already been used by the local Venetian governement during the first colonisation (1211) to define the six sexteria in the region of Chandax (today, Herakleion).As a military union, Byzantine turma with its castle is nothing less than the Venetian castellania, the basis of the Venetian military defense system in Crete. Although Venetian documents of the period helps us to locate the Byzantine turmae in Crete (we have the villages and the turma to which they belong), their role in the administrative and military system of the Byzantine Empire is still not very clear. The only thing we are certain about is that in the Xllth century Byzantine turma throughout the Empire has already become a geographical term as well as we find it a century later in Venetian Crete.Tables here presented contain all villages we know to which turma they belonged. There is a table for each turma and sexterium and another one with all villages in alphabetical order. There are also a plan for each territorio (Chania, Rethymno, Sitia) of medieval Crete with the turmae and the villages, and a plan with the borders of six sexteria in the territorio of Chandax.  (EL)
  Charalambos GasparisFrom the Byzantine to Venetian turma. Crete, XIIIth -XlVth centuries Turma, a term coming from the Byzantine thematic system, is found very often in the XIIIth and XlVth century Venetian documents concerning the island of Crete. The Venetian turma in Crete was not an administrative or military term, but simply a geographical one, to indicate the exact post of fiefs and villages. Byzantine turma had already been used by the local Venetian governement during the first colonisation (1211) to define the six sexteria in the region of Chandax (today, Herakleion).As a military union, Byzantine turma with its castle is nothing less than the Venetian castellania, the basis of the Venetian military defense system in Crete. Although Venetian documents of the period helps us to locate the Byzantine turmae in Crete (we have the villages and the turma to which they belong), their role in the administrative and military system of the Byzantine Empire is still not very clear. The only thing we are certain about is that in the Xllth century Byzantine turma throughout the Empire has already become a geographical term as well as we find it a century later in Venetian Crete.Tables here presented contain all villages we know to which turma they belonged. There is a table for each turma and sexterium and another one with all villages in alphabetical order. There are also a plan for each territorio (Chania, Rethymno, Sitia) of medieval Crete with the turmae and the villages, and a plan with the borders of six sexteria in the territorio of Chandax.  (EN)

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
ανάλυση εγγράφων (EN)

χωριό (EN)
τούρμα (EN)
διοίκηση (EN)
Μεσαιωνική Κρήτη (EN)
Βενετική Κρήτη (EN)
πολιτική γεωγραφία (EN)


Βυζαντινά Σύμμεικτα

Greek

2008-09-26


Ινστιτούτο Ιστορικών Ερευνών (ΕΙΕ) / Institute of Historical Research (IHR/NHRF) (EN)

1791-4884
1105-1639
Βυζαντινά Σύμμεικτα; ΣΥΜΜΕΙΚΤΑ 14; 167-228 (EL)
Byzantina Symmeikta; SYMMEIKTA 14; 167-228 (EN)

Copyright (c) 2014 Χαράλαμπος ΓΑΣΠΑΡΗΣ (EN)



*Institutions are responsible for keeping their URLs functional (digital file, item page in repository site)