In the Middle Ages, the Mediterranean was the scenario for the development of a plural and diverse political entity, which became one of the European models of mixed monarchies. It had accessible institutions and a representativeness of the estates, and cultural traits converted into unifying factors, an economy involved in the great maritime routes and, with all this, a plurality under one crown, that of the kings of Aragon. The memory of this peculiarity of this structure has survived in a dense, widely varying, network of archives and diverse sources that need to be duly explored and analysed.
Indeed, the later articulation of society and historical research under the parameters of the nation-state, so deeply rooted over centuries, has even hindered our understanding of what entities like the Crown of Aragon were, to the point that its participative institutions or the membranous traits of its culture could be claimed to be immature from the conceptual rigidities imposed later.
It is undoubtedly necessary to facilitate the coming together, through debate and interdisciplinary relations, of everyone who, from history, art history, philology (literature and language) or any other perspective, studies different aspects and geographies of what was the Crown of Aragon. Accordingly, it is necessary to create an association, one that facilitates relations and exchanges between researchers, anywhere in the world, whose research is focused on the Crown of Aragon. Together, we can improve the results of our work, increase the circulation of the interpretative paths and also defend adequately what the Crown of Aragon was and represented.
To this end, we present the new Association of Historians of the Crown of Aragon (Societas Historicorum Coronae Aragonum) and invite you to accompany us in this scientific and amiable adventure.
Aymat Catafau, Université de Perpignan Via Domitia
Pietro Corrao, Università degli Studi di Palermo
Charles Dalli, L-Università ta’ Malta
Fulvio Delle Donne, Università degli Studi della Basilicata
Antoni Furió, Universitat de València
Luciano Gallinari, Istituto di Storia dell’Europa Mediterranea- CNR Cagliari
Carlos Laliena, Universidad de Zaragoza
Flocel Sabaté, Universitat de Lleida
Eleni Sakellariou, University of Crete
Nada Zecevic, Royal Holloway University of London
More information and materials can be obtained at https://hiscoar.org/