"When the Turks entered Anatolia in the 11th century, the Byzantine Emperor appointed a minor Turkish prince with the title of Sultan of Rome. Ball believes that this was no accident, and instead was a sign of how much the Ottoman Empire had truly become a Eurasian power, a reality cemented when they captured Constantinople from the west. Ball is described…as a Near East archaeologist, and this is the third volume of his four part series designed to explore the complex history of European relations with the East. Although well researched, it is…appropriate for the interested general reader." — Book News