The German ocean : medieval Europe around the North Sea


Brian Ayers
Bok Engelsk 2016
Utgitt
2016
Omfang
xxi, 268 sider : illustrasjoner
Opplysninger
Innhold: The region in 1100 -- 12th- and 13th-century consolidation -- The 14th century : increasing wealth and increasing pressures -- The 15th century : towards greater sophistication -- Merchants and their impact -- The 16th century : a new world.. - "The German Ocean examines archaeological and historical evidence for the development of economies and societies around the North Sea from the beginning of the 12th century until the end of the 16th century. It draws in material from Scandinavia to Normandy and from Scotland to Kent. While largely concerned with the North Sea littoral, when necessary it takes account of adjacent areas such as the Baltic or inland hinterlands. The North Sea is often perceived as a great divide, divorcing the British Isles from continental Europe. In cultural terms, however, it has always acted more as a lake, supporting communities around its fringes which have frequently had much in common. This is especially true of the medieval period when trade links, fostered in the two centuries prior to 1100, expanded in the 12th and 13th centuries to ensure the development of maritime societies whose material culture was often more remarkable for its similarity across distance than its diversity. Geography, access to raw materials and political expediency could nevertheless combine to provide distinctive regional variations. Economies developed more rapidly in some areas than others; local solutions to problems produced urban and rural environments of different aspect; the growth, and sometimes decline, of towns and ports was often dictated by local as much as wider factors"--Forlaget.
Emner
Geografisk emneord
Dewey
ISBN
978-1-904768-49-4

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