Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2020
Early modern international societies beyond Europe were based on shared sets of beliefs that differed dramatically from Western views regarding the nature of the material and social world. However, the encounter of the West with non-European international societies was not an encounter between two rigidly defined static systems. Instead, both Western and non-Western polities redefined their identities as well as the political-social expression of those identities in the dyadic encounter.
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