Molly GREENE
Curriculum VITAE
Department/Program(s):History
Position: Professor
Title: Professor of History and Hellenic Studies. Associate Chair, Department of History. Acting Director, Program in Hellenic Studies.
Area(s): Europe
Field: History of the Mediterranean Basin; early modern and modern Greek history; Ottoman history
Molly Greene studies the history of the Mediterranean Basin, the Ottoman Empire, and the Greek world. Her interests include the social and economic history of the Ottoman Empire, the experience of Greeks under Ottoman rule, Mediterranean piracy, and the institution of the market. After earning a B.A. in political science at Tufts University (1981), Professor Greene spent several years living in Greece and then completed a Ph.D. in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton (1993), where she studied Ottoman history. Upon graduating she joined the Princeton faculty with a joint appointment in the History Department and the Program in Hellenic Studies. Her first book, A Shared World: Christians and Muslims in the Early Modern Mediterranean (2000), examines the transition from Venetian to Ottoman rule on the island of Crete, which the Ottomans conquered in 1669. Challenging the assumption of a radical rupture with the arrival of the Ottomans, Greene shows that the population of Crete had been drawn into the Ottoman world long before the conquest and that important continuities linked the Venetian and the Ottoman periods. Greene also challenges a simple model of Christian-Muslim antagonism in the eastern Mediterranean and argues that the tension between Latin and Orthodox Christianity was just as important in shaping the history of the region.
Current Project
Professor Greene’s book Catholic Corsairs and Greek Merchants: A Maritime History of the Mediterranean, 1450-1700, has just been published with Princeton University Press. Her next project is a history of the Greeks and the Greek world under Ottoman rule for a multi-volume series being published by Edinburgh University Press. Teaching Interests
Professor Greene has taught courses on Mediterranean history (16th century to 20th century); early modern commerce in the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean; nationalism in the Balkans; a survey of Greek history from Late Antiquity to the present day and Ottoman history.
Education
- Ph.D., Princeton, 1993
Research Languages
Greek, Italian, French, Ottoman Turkish and Turkish