This paper ventures into the Great Turkish War, which took place between
1683 and 1690, a subject historically well known, but rarely studied according to the
way the military events were narrated to the Spanish readers. Therefore, in this work,
I will offer the bigger picture of this “war of the printed newspapers”. I will approach,
as well, the image of the Transylvanian land created for a Spanish-speaker reader. It is
characterised by a mythical halo that can be considered the reflection of an armed and
cultural conflict that took place between Eastern and Western Europe. The physical
and literary analysis of those printed documents will allow us to identify how the
literary image of the Romanian regions was created for Spain. Finally, I expect to be able to fulfill one of the objectives of the project Oltenia in the 15th-19th Centuries, in
which this paper may be included: to initiate an international and interdisciplinary
debate about how the Romanian space is perceived in Spain in the Modern Age.
Autor
Gómez Sánchez-Ferrer, Guillermo
Palabras clave
relaciones de sucesos,
Transilvania,
guerra austro-turca,
ficcionalización,
news pamphlets,
Transylvania,
Great Turkish War,
fictionalisation