List of Illustrations and Tables; Acknowledgements; Foreword, Scott Redford; Introduction – Space and Place: Applications to Medieval Anatolia, Patricia Blessing and Rachel Goshgarian; Part I. Building: Masons and Infrastructure; Chapter 2. Craftsmen in Medieval Anatolia: Methods and Mobility, Richard McClary; Chapter 3. Stones for Travelers: Notes on the Masonry of Seljuk Road Caravanserais, Cinzia Tavernari; Part II. Social Groups: Akhis and Futuwwa; Chapter 4. Suggestions on the Social Meaning, Structure and Functions of Akhi Communities and their Hospices in Medieval Anatolia, ?klil Selçuk; Chapter 5. Social Graces and Urban Spaces: Brotherhood and the Ambiguities of Masculinity and Religious Practice in Late Medieval Anatolia, Rachel Goshgarian; Part III. Exchange: Islamic and Christian Architecture; Chapter 6. Transformation of the ‘Sacred’ Image of a Byzantine Cappadocian Settlement, Fatma Gül Öztürk; Chapter 7. The ‘Islamicness’ of Some Decorative Patterns in the Church of Tigran Honents in Ani, Mattia Guidetti; Part IV. Frameworks: Language, Geography and Identity; Chapter 8. Harvesting Garden Semantics in Late Medieval Anatolia, Nicolas Trépanier; Chapter 9. All Quiet on the Eastern Frontier? The Contemporaries of Early Ottoman Architecture in Eastern Anatolia, Patricia Blessing; Chapter 10. The ‘Dual Identity’ of Mahperi Khatun: Piety, Patronage and Marriage across Frontiers in Seljuk Anatolia, Suzan Yalman; Notes on Contributors; Bibliography; Index.