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Genoa was primarily a mercantile port, not a military one. Blessed with a deep and protected harbor, Genoa was pushed to the sea by the Apennine Mountains, forced—like Selim’s Trabzon—to spread along a narrow strip of coast. It was “one of the maritime wonders of Europe,” in one historian’s words, a key way-station on the “coastal highway” linking Italy and France.
God's Shadow: Sultan Selim, His Ottoman Empire, and the Making of the Modern World
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