To the Ends of the Earth: How Ancient Conquerors, Explorers, Scientists, and Traders Connected the World
Autor Raimund J. Schulz Traducere de Robert Savageen Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 iun 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197668023
ISBN-10: 019766802X
Pagini: 560
Ilustrații: 26 b/w
Dimensiuni: 170 x 226 x 58 mm
Greutate: 0.93 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019766802X
Pagini: 560
Ilustrații: 26 b/w
Dimensiuni: 170 x 226 x 58 mm
Greutate: 0.93 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Exploration of "new worlds" did not start with Columbus. In To the Ends of the Earth, Schulz offers a compelling, vivid account of those earlier journeys and the connectivity they brought across unfathomable distances and cultural divides. Following the trail of epic enterprises, technological innovations, and obscure knowledge-chains of Phoenicians, Greeks, Persians, and Romans, among others, Schulz' history decenters the Classical powerhouses and expands in every cardinal direction beyond colonial and imperial networks
To the Ends of the Earth is a wonderful romp through the history of Greco-Roman exploration, revealing an important and underappreciated aspect of the ancient Mediterranean world. From Phoenician sailors to the campaigns of Alexander and the wonders described by Pytheas in the north Atlantic, Schulz reminds us how new knowledge was created, and what the impacts of newly encountered places were on the Greco-Roman world. This is a very well written and serious book, and a complete joy to read. I learned something on every single page.
To the Ends Of the Earth is a synthetic and incisive discussion of why exploration took place in environments where leaving home would be a difficult and often fatal proposition. The chronological scope of the book is impressive and includes issues of why exploration seemed to come to a stop in late Roman times and then began again in the Renaissance. There is no recent book available that covers the broad range of exploration found in Schulz' book.
[Schulz'] comprehensive study of commerce, conquest and exploration follows various Bronze Age adventurers on paths that lead to Carthage, Persia, India, China and elsewhere... The dangers courted by travelers in To the Ends of the Earth will daunt its readers. The wonders paraded ought to impress or inspire them. But it is to the curiosity of the ancient explorers that we owe the greatest debt.
So deft is the author's handling of his material, and so lively his touch with ancient sources, that the reader never flags... Schulz has, I think, a convincing sense of why explorers' mental worlds are transcendent--always imagined before they become real, always fantastic even when experienced. His way of treating geography as a kind of literature, documented in poetry and fiction as much as in scholarship and science, helps us see explorers as they commonly saw themselves: heroes of fictions of their own, based in part on their readings, in part on their yearnings.
Successfully creates a comprehensive account of explorations that took place during the Middle Bronze Age (2000â1600 BCE) right up to the first century of the Common Era... The book rapidly covers enormous ground, and it utilizes a breadth of resources—literary, mythological, archaeological - from a vast array of Eurasian cultures in a compelling synthesis that never feels like mere survey... Highly recommended for scholarly readers, but general readers who are interested in reading titles that reevaluate when globalization began will appreciate it as well.
To the Ends of the Earth is a wonderful romp through the history of Greco-Roman exploration, revealing an important and underappreciated aspect of the ancient Mediterranean world. From Phoenician sailors to the campaigns of Alexander and the wonders described by Pytheas in the north Atlantic, Schulz reminds us how new knowledge was created, and what the impacts of newly encountered places were on the Greco-Roman world. This is a very well written and serious book, and a complete joy to read. I learned something on every single page.
To the Ends Of the Earth is a synthetic and incisive discussion of why exploration took place in environments where leaving home would be a difficult and often fatal proposition. The chronological scope of the book is impressive and includes issues of why exploration seemed to come to a stop in late Roman times and then began again in the Renaissance. There is no recent book available that covers the broad range of exploration found in Schulz' book.
[Schulz'] comprehensive study of commerce, conquest and exploration follows various Bronze Age adventurers on paths that lead to Carthage, Persia, India, China and elsewhere... The dangers courted by travelers in To the Ends of the Earth will daunt its readers. The wonders paraded ought to impress or inspire them. But it is to the curiosity of the ancient explorers that we owe the greatest debt.
So deft is the author's handling of his material, and so lively his touch with ancient sources, that the reader never flags... Schulz has, I think, a convincing sense of why explorers' mental worlds are transcendent--always imagined before they become real, always fantastic even when experienced. His way of treating geography as a kind of literature, documented in poetry and fiction as much as in scholarship and science, helps us see explorers as they commonly saw themselves: heroes of fictions of their own, based in part on their readings, in part on their yearnings.
Successfully creates a comprehensive account of explorations that took place during the Middle Bronze Age (2000â1600 BCE) right up to the first century of the Common Era... The book rapidly covers enormous ground, and it utilizes a breadth of resources—literary, mythological, archaeological - from a vast array of Eurasian cultures in a compelling synthesis that never feels like mere survey... Highly recommended for scholarly readers, but general readers who are interested in reading titles that reevaluate when globalization began will appreciate it as well.
Notă biografică
Robert Savage is the author of Hölderlin after the Catastrophe and the translator of many books, including Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger's Maria Theresa: The Habsburg Empress in Her Time.