Publication:
Not so innocent clerics, monarchs, and the ethnoreligious cleansing of Western Europe

dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of International Relations
dc.contributor.kuauthorAktürk, Şener
dc.contributor.otherDepartment of International Relations
dc.contributor.schoolcollegeinstituteCollege of Administrative Sciences and Economics
dc.date.accessioned2024-12-29T09:40:14Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstractSizeable Jewish and Muslim communities lived across large swathes of medieval Western Europe. But all the Muslim communities and almost all the Jewish communities in polities that correspond to present-day England, France, Hungary, Italy, Portugal, and Spain were eradicated between 1064 and 1526. Most studies of ethnoreligious violence in Europe focus on communal, regional, and national political dynamics to explain its outbreak and variation. Recent scholarship shows how the Catholic Church in medieval Europe contributed to the long-term political development and the “rise of the West.” But the Church was also responsible for eradicating non-Christian minorities. Three factors explain ethnoreligious cleansing of non-Christians in medieval Western Europe: (1) the papacy as a supranational religious authority with increasing powers; (2) the dehumanization of non-Christians and their classification as monarchical property; and (3) fierce geopolitical competition among Catholic Western European monarchs that made them particularly vulnerable to papal-clerical demands to eradicate non-Christians. The extant scholarship maintains that ethnoreligious cleansing is a modern phenomenon that is often committed by nationalist actors for secular purposes. In contrast, a novel explanation highlights the central role that the supranational hierocratic actors played in ethnoreligious cleansing. These findings also contribute to understanding recent and current ethnic cleansing in places like Cambodia, Iraq, Myanmar, the Soviet Union, and Syria.
dc.description.indexedbyWoS
dc.description.indexedbyScopus
dc.description.issue4
dc.description.openaccessAll Open Access
dc.description.openaccessHybrid Gold Open Access
dc.description.publisherscopeInternational
dc.description.sponsoredbyTubitakEuEU
dc.description.sponsors266. Phillips, War, Religion, and Empire, p. 11, emphasis mine. 267. The Turkish Academy of Sciences (T\u00DCBA) provided funding through its GEBIP award program for this research (2016\u20132019). The author bene\u00AAted from discussing ethnoreligious exclusions in comparative perspective at the Barcelona symposium of The Securitization of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities and the Rise of Xenophobia in the EU (SECUREU Jean Monnet Network-620149-EPP-l-2020-1-ES-EPPJMO-NETWORK), which also provided Open Access funding for this article.
dc.description.volume48
dc.identifier.doi10.1162/isec_a_00484
dc.identifier.issn0162-2889
dc.identifier.quartileQ1
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85195786477
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1162/isec_a_00484
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/23268
dc.identifier.wos1237592800004
dc.keywordsNational identity
dc.keywordsNationalists
dc.keywordsCivics
dc.languageen
dc.publisherMIT Press Journals
dc.sourceInternational Security
dc.subjectInternational relations
dc.titleNot so innocent clerics, monarchs, and the ethnoreligious cleansing of Western Europe
dc.typeJournal article
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.contributor.kuauthorAktürk, Şener
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication9fc25a77-75a8-48c0-8878-02d9b71a9126
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication.latestForDiscovery9fc25a77-75a8-48c0-8878-02d9b71a9126

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