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Tamta's World: The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia

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Ruisen Zheng

 The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia

Rating: Title: Author: Audience: Difficulty: Publisher: Published: Pages:
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Tamta's World: The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia
Antony Eastmond
University
Medium
Cambridge University Press
2017
434

I would highly recommend Anthony Eastmond's 2017 "Tamta’s World: The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia." This book is written by an expert art historian of medieval Caucasus and offers a delightful read about the life of a noblewoman and her life in the 13th century. It is more unique because of Tamta's encounters with so many different cultures and people, and her witness became a crucial testimony for us to understand this period.

With Tamta’s World: The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia, Anthony Eastmond, currently the AG Leventis Professor of Byzantine Art at The Courtauld Institute of Art, offers us a vivid account of Tamta’s life and the diverse cultures and people she witnessed in the 13th-century Caucasian world. Using Tamta as a lens to analyse the nature of gender, power, and religions in the vast territory from Anatolia to Mongolia, this book articulates important political changes and social transformation that constituted the many layers of Tamta’s multiple identities.

This book is an example of historical scholarship that brings many fields together.

It is an ambitious project to write the story of Tamta, considering that there are only a few elusive words on textual records about her, a woman, albeit of noble family, in the Middle Ages. As a work of microhistory and biography of a woman, this book would be an excellent addition to scholarship on medieval women, complementing the recent increase in research on women’s lives in the medieval Eastern Mediterranean world, such as the works by Judith Herrin and Lynda Garland. Moreover, where literary sources fall short, Eastmond compensates by exanimating text but also the art, architecture, and material culture to reimagine and reconstruct Tamta and her life. In this way, this book could be seen as a continuation of Eastmond’s 1998 book Royal Imagery in Medieval Georgia.

The impact of the medieval global studies certainly is also reflected in this book, as the story of Tamta associated many distinct groups that shared a bittersweet past in the Caucasus, which was called the Edge of the Empires. The first two chapters recount the early life of Tamta as a girl and the origin of her family in medieval Georgia at the height of power. She came from a prominent family, and her father held an important position at the Court of Queen Tamar. The next nine chapters, chapters 3-11, reconstruct her family marriage to al-Awhad and al-Ashraf Musa, both of whom were nephews of the great Muslim ruler Saladin, and consider the place (Akhlat) where she lived as well as the many implications of an interfaith marriage as a Christian in a Muslim court and a wife in a polygamous relationship. She became a patron and a voice for the Christian people in Akhlat and, by all accounts, a respectable figure in the high society. Then her fate reversed (chapter 11-12), as the victim of the Khwarazmians and the Mongols captured her and her city in the 1020s. These two chapters navigate her life as a noble in captivity and study how she negotiated her position with various people for survival. Her efforts paid off in chapter 13 as the Mongols decided to send her to the distant Mongol court at Karakorum and returned her later as their representative in Akhlat. Tamta became the ruler, rather than the ruler's daughter, wife, or captive, and remained so until her death in the 1250s. Tamta’s own odysseys were both a testament to her strong will as a survivor and the hardships she experienced.

Overall, this book is an example of historical scholarship that brings many fields together. Eastmond's book is worth reading for both scholars and students who are interested in gender history. Comes with the book is an extensive bibliography and maps, so interested readers could use them as their own starting point for further research. Moreover, its interdisciplinary aspect could be an instructive lesson for all historians who are not content with the mere textual sources and wish to do more to paint the subject they are writing about. It also manages to address the need to globalize the ‘Middle Age’ by telling us how it should be done because Tamta’s world, despite its diverse encounters, was very much a product of a local community, and Eastmond made sure he would return it at the end. The questions this book raises would be beneficial to the newly started field of Global Middle Ages, and for historians and students who would want to study what would be a fascinating read.

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About the Reviewer

Ruisen Zheng

Ruisen Zheng is a fourth-year History PhD student at King's College London funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. He works on the comparative studies of Song dynasty China and Macedonian Byzantium, and on the global Middle Ages in general.

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