The Desire for Syria in Medieval England, 9781009426800
Hardcover
Pirates, plunder, and ‘Syriana’: Syria’s allure changed medieval England forever.
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The Desire for Syria in Medieval England

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  • Hardcover

    276 pages

  • Release Date

    31 December 2025

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Summary

Syria’s Allure: How Medieval Imports Shaped England

In June 1458, off the coast of Malta, pirate Giuliano Gattilusio brutally ended Robert Sturmy’s life, seizing his ship’s precious cargo. This cargo, beyond its monetary value, held cultural significance. Sweet wines, spices, silks, jewels, and minerals from Syria captivated the medieval English imagination.

E. K. Myerson uses this dramatic incident to reveal the profound impact of Syrian imports on medieval English art, lan…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781009426800
ISBN-10:100942680X
Author:E.K. Myerson
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Imprint:Cambridge University Press
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:276
Release Date:31 December 2025
Weight:500g
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Critics Review

‘A startling work of scholarship, imagination, and defamiliarisation, this book is as exciting as it’s original.’ Devorah Baum, Professor of English Literature, University of Southampton‘The Desire for Syria in Medieval England is an eloquent and original study of the internationalism of medieval Europe and the Near East. E. K. Myerson shows how the global marketplace of the later Middle Ages influenced English culture, as commerce and commodification went hand in hand with an ambivalent desire for the East. The Desire for Syria in Medieval England helps us to see the intersections of longing and power in a timely account of how medieval culture understood the wider world.’ Anthony Bale, Professor of Medieval and Renaissance English, University of Cambridge‘A rich and timely book that explores the deep connections between European markets and the products of the Holy Land. The story of a shipwreck is the starting point for a fascinating analysis of medieval texts, from poetry to pilgrimage accounts. Myerson has a wonderful eye for detail and brings the objects and fantasies of the fifteenth century into sharp – and thought-provoking – focus.’ Marion Turner, J. R. R. Tolkien Professor of English Literature and Language, University of Oxford‘The Desire for Syria in Medieval England is an entrancing, exhilarating revelation of how the idea of Syria and the desire for the precious things emanating from it pervaded late medieval and early modern England. E. K. Myerson’s book is arranged as a glittering inventory of the goods carried by merchant ships between the Levant and Europe, which allows them to riddle out with erudite delight the meanings – magical, medical, mercantile, alchemical, and sacramental – of commodities like sweet wine, spices, silk, jewels, and alum. Nor does Myerson let us forget how much of the desire for Syria persists in our present, which their particoloured history reflects back to itself in a medieval mirror.’ Steven Connor, Professor of English and Director of Research, Digital Futures Institute, King’s College London‘Like one of the medieval craftworkers who appear in these pages – jeweller, silk weaver, or glass engraver – E. K. Myerson has wrought a remarkable, intricate, and wonderful story of cultural entanglement. Scrupulously attentive to the unsaid and the unexamined, adventurous and imaginative in their approach, and ever thoughtful in their commentary, they complicate prevalent views of Muslim, Jewish, and Christian hostility. The Desire for Syria in Medieval England is an exciting and unusual study, packed with a rich cargo of treasures – in more ways than one.’ Marina Warner, Author of Stranger Magic: Charmed States and the Arabian Nights

About The Author

E.K. Myerson

E. K. Myerson is an artist, writer, and curator, currently studying at the Royal College of Art. Their academic and creative writing has appeared in publications including GLQ, The TLS, Wasafiri Magazine, New Medieval Literatures, postmedieval, and Wellcome Collection Stories. They were a Genesis Jewish Book Week Emerging Writer in 2021–2. They received their PhD in medieval literature from Birkbeck College in 2022, and have held postdoctoral fellowships at the Wellcome Trust / ISSF Fund, the Parker Library, and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Their essay-film ‘submerged reliquary of a Kentish saint’, made with artist Sophie Mei Birkin at the Jarman Lab, was screened at the Birkbeck Institute of the Moving Image in 2022 and 2023.

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