- Ph.D., Cornell, 1969
BIO
Having been apotheosed into the ranks of the emeriti in 2001, Andrea has devoted his golden years to research, academic writing, lectures, and travel. He spent spring semester, 2002, at the University of Louisville, where he held the chair of Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence in the Liberal Studies Program. In addition to offering a seminar on the Silk Road, 200 BCE—1500 CE and presenting a number of public talks on multiple Silk Road topics, Andrea honed his thoroughbred handicapping skills at the Keeneland and Churchill Downs racetracks. Although he always bet on the correct horses, most of the time they or their jockeys failed to understand what was expected of them.
Andrea usually missed winning exacta bets, but he recently hit an academic exacta. On 19 October 2022, the University of the Peloponnese in Kalamata, Greece inducted him as a professor honoris causa for his work on crusade and world history. On 3 November, the Academia Via Serica of Keimyung University, Daegu, Korea, inducted a jet-lagged Andrea as a Distinguished Professor for his work on the Silk Road.
His current areas of research include the transfer of ideas along the Silk Road, the crusades in the context of world history, holy war in world history, and the expansion of Latin Christendom, ca. 450-1500. His research and other academic work since 2001 brought him to China multiple times, where he studied Buddhist cave art at Dunhuang and remote sites in Inner Mongolia and Manchuria. Other world history research occasioned trips to Taiwan, Morocco, Kenya, Tanzania, Singapore, Australia, Turkey, India, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkestan, Tajikistan, and Korea. Less exotic but no less important academic locales include a wide variety of European nations. Despite his preference for the Mediterranean and the lifestyle of la bella Italia, his crusade studies even brought him to Denmark in 2016, where he pursued the trail of the Baltic Crusades. A bit of research also enabled him to find good Italian restaurants in Odense and Copenhagen.
His now-out-of-date Encyclopedia of the Crusades (Greenwood Press, 2003) looks at the classical crusades of the 11th through 13th centuries from the Abbasids to the Zangids. His favorite entry is “Cannibalism.” The 2nd edition of his weighty Contemporary Sources for the Fourth Crusade (Leiden: Brill) appeared in 2009. The question is: Do you really want to know that much about the thirteenth-century Latin sources for this crusade? In 2011, the 21-volume ABC-Clio World History Encyclopedia appeared, for which Andrea served as general editor and pinch-hitting author for numerous articles. Taking on this burden was an act of enormous hubris and sheer lunacy, but he did so with humility and clear-headedness. Currently, the 8th edition of The Human Record: Sources of Global History, 2 vols. (Cengage, 2016), co-authored with James H. Overfield, is on bookstore shelves. Although it is beginning to show its age, there is apparently no plan to produce a ninth edition. This is a pity because royalties subvent his travels.
Andrea also serves as general editor for two series published by Hackett Publishing, Co.: The Myths of History Series (co-edited with Andrew Holt) and Critical Themes in World History. In 2016, he co-edited with Andrew Holt Seven Myths of the Crusades, which served as the initial volume in the Myths of History Series. The book’s smarmy Introduction, in which he trashes Terry Jones’ faux documentary, The Crusades, is totally his doing. No blame accrues to Andrew.
In a further act of shameless self-nepotism, Andrea published his most recent book, Sanctified Violence: Holy War in World History (Hackett, 2021) in the Critical Themes series. A total dunce, largely (but not entirely) by choice, when it comes to almost all matters digital, Andrea dragooned Andrew as co-author so that the book might include a section dealing with the use of social media by today’s holy warriors.
Missing the classroom (but not the reading of student papers), Andrea has offered seminars on the crusades and other topics relating to premodern world history at several universities in China and Turkey, and is ever eager to talk to any group, large or small, about his academic obsessions. His heavy Boston accent, however, has led at times to some misunderstandings on the part of his audiences.
Andrea continues to be an active member of quite a few learned societies and served as President of the World History Association (2010-2012). He also is the apparently eternal Secretary (éminence grise) of the New England Regional World History Association. Andrea asks that you visit the WHA’s and NERWHA’s respective websites www.thewha.org and www.nerwha.org to learn more about these worthy associations and to discover where and when they will be convening and frolicking next.
Area(s) of expertise
Medieval Europe, Premodern World History
Bio
Having been apotheosed into the ranks of the emeriti in 2001, Andrea has devoted his golden years to research, academic writing, lectures, and travel. He spent spring semester, 2002, at the University of Louisville, where he held the chair of Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence in the Liberal Studies Program. In addition to offering a seminar on the Silk Road, 200 BCE—1500 CE and presenting a number of public talks on multiple Silk Road topics, Andrea honed his thoroughbred handicapping skills at the Keeneland and Churchill Downs racetracks. Although he always bet on the correct horses, most of the time they or their jockeys failed to understand what was expected of them.
Andrea usually missed winning exacta bets, but he recently hit an academic exacta. On 19 October 2022, the University of the Peloponnese in Kalamata, Greece inducted him as a professor honoris causa for his work on crusade and world history. On 3 November, the Academia Via Serica of Keimyung University, Daegu, Korea, inducted a jet-lagged Andrea as a Distinguished Professor for his work on the Silk Road.
His current areas of research include the transfer of ideas along the Silk Road, the crusades in the context of world history, holy war in world history, and the expansion of Latin Christendom, ca. 450-1500. His research and other academic work since 2001 brought him to China multiple times, where he studied Buddhist cave art at Dunhuang and remote sites in Inner Mongolia and Manchuria. Other world history research occasioned trips to Taiwan, Morocco, Kenya, Tanzania, Singapore, Australia, Turkey, India, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkestan, Tajikistan, and Korea. Less exotic but no less important academic locales include a wide variety of European nations. Despite his preference for the Mediterranean and the lifestyle of la bella Italia, his crusade studies even brought him to Denmark in 2016, where he pursued the trail of the Baltic Crusades. A bit of research also enabled him to find good Italian restaurants in Odense and Copenhagen.
His now-out-of-date Encyclopedia of the Crusades (Greenwood Press, 2003) looks at the classical crusades of the 11th through 13th centuries from the Abbasids to the Zangids. His favorite entry is “Cannibalism.” The 2nd edition of his weighty Contemporary Sources for the Fourth Crusade (Leiden: Brill) appeared in 2009. The question is: Do you really want to know that much about the thirteenth-century Latin sources for this crusade? In 2011, the 21-volume ABC-Clio World History Encyclopedia appeared, for which Andrea served as general editor and pinch-hitting author for numerous articles. Taking on this burden was an act of enormous hubris and sheer lunacy, but he did so with humility and clear-headedness. Currently, the 8th edition of The Human Record: Sources of Global History, 2 vols. (Cengage, 2016), co-authored with James H. Overfield, is on bookstore shelves. Although it is beginning to show its age, there is apparently no plan to produce a ninth edition. This is a pity because royalties subvent his travels.
Andrea also serves as general editor for two series published by Hackett Publishing, Co.: The Myths of History Series (co-edited with Andrew Holt) and Critical Themes in World History. In 2016, he co-edited with Andrew Holt Seven Myths of the Crusades, which served as the initial volume in the Myths of History Series. The book’s smarmy Introduction, in which he trashes Terry Jones’ faux documentary, The Crusades, is totally his doing. No blame accrues to Andrew.
In a further act of shameless self-nepotism, Andrea published his most recent book, Sanctified Violence: Holy War in World History (Hackett, 2021) in the Critical Themes series. A total dunce, largely (but not entirely) by choice, when it comes to almost all matters digital, Andrea dragooned Andrew as co-author so that the book might include a section dealing with the use of social media by today’s holy warriors.
Missing the classroom (but not the reading of student papers), Andrea has offered seminars on the crusades and other topics relating to premodern world history at several universities in China and Turkey, and is ever eager to talk to any group, large or small, about his academic obsessions. His heavy Boston accent, however, has led at times to some misunderstandings on the part of his audiences.
Andrea continues to be an active member of quite a few learned societies and served as President of the World History Association (2010-2012). He also is the apparently eternal Secretary (éminence grise) of the New England Regional World History Association. Andrea asks that you visit the WHA’s and NERWHA’s respective websites www.thewha.org and www.nerwha.org to learn more about these worthy associations and to discover where and when they will be convening and frolicking next.
Areas of Expertise
Medieval Europe, Premodern World History